Mike Lewis
Staff Member
Here is an image of The Pinwheel Galaxy (M101), a dramatic face-on spiral galaxy located at an approximate distance of 21 million light years from us, that never sets when observed from up here at 40 degrees North Latitude, and is well positioned for many observers in the Northern Hemisphere. This was imaged from dark skies at the Arizona Sky Village, near Portal, AZ in 2017. This is a natural color image using a dedicated astro camera, that allows the capture of some of the star forming regions (that show up as red or purple colored here) that are emitting very heavily in the Hydrogen-alpha wavelength. This was my first 'keeper' image from my 8" Celestron EdgeHD 800 scope.
Equipment:
ZWO ASI1600MM-C Camera @ -15C and
gain:139 Offset:21
Software Bisque MyT Mount, unguided
Celestron EdgeHD 800 8", with 0.62x reducer, 1260mm @ f/6.2
Software:
Pixinsight Commercial Version 1.8
Lightroom CC
Photoshop CC
Light Frames:
Luminance: 55 x 90 secs (82.5 mins)
Red: 6 x 150 secs (15 mins)
Green: 6 x 150 secs (15 mins)
Blue: 6 x 150 secs (15 mins)
Dark Frames:
20 x 90 secs (30 mins)
20 x 150 secs (50 mins)
Comments and critiques welcome!
ML
Equipment:
ZWO ASI1600MM-C Camera @ -15C and
gain:139 Offset:21
Software Bisque MyT Mount, unguided
Celestron EdgeHD 800 8", with 0.62x reducer, 1260mm @ f/6.2
Software:
Pixinsight Commercial Version 1.8
Lightroom CC
Photoshop CC
Light Frames:
Luminance: 55 x 90 secs (82.5 mins)
Red: 6 x 150 secs (15 mins)
Green: 6 x 150 secs (15 mins)
Blue: 6 x 150 secs (15 mins)
Dark Frames:
20 x 90 secs (30 mins)
20 x 150 secs (50 mins)
Comments and critiques welcome!
ML