Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Images from Late November

The stars and deep sky objects of winter are starting to make their way into the night sky. Among some of these objects are the brightest star in the night sky, Sirius, or alpha Canis Majoris. Also, one of the few naked eye nebulae, M42, the Orion Nebula, is prominent as the center star in the sword of the constellation Orion, the Hunter.
Of course, the beautiful open cluster, Pleiades (M45), is prominent in the zodiacal constellation, Taurus, the Bull.
Still in the sky is the Andromeda Galaxy, M31, overhead and working its way into the western sky late in the evening. Below are some images I shot on November 26, 2008.


This image is of the Double Cluster in the constellation, Perseus. You can see the two distinct clusters in this image.
Camera - Canon EOS 40D
Lens - Sigma 300 MM f2.8 Lens, set at f3.5 - ISO 800 - (480MM effective focal length)
15 Minutes of exposure (15 x1 minutes)
AstroTrac TT320X Astrophotography mount for tracking



This image is of M45, the Pleiades Cluster in the constellation Taurus. The gases around the stars reflect the starlight. Therefore, the nebulosity around the stars are called a reflection nebula.
Camera - Canon EOS 40D
Lens - Sigma 300 MM f2.8 Lens, set at f3.5 - ISO 800 - (480MM effective focal length)
30 Minutes of exposure (10 x3 minutes)
AstroTrac TT320X Astrophotography mount for tracking



The center of this image is M42, the Orion Nebula in the constellation Orion. The gases around the stars are excited by the radiation from the embedded stars, and glow. Therefore, the nebulosity around the stars are called an emission nebula. It is a stellar nursery, and the bright stars in the center of the nebula are "baby stars".The Orion Nebula is to the right, and the "Running Man" Nebula is to the left. Notice the difference in the colors of these two nebulae. The "Running Man" Nebula is a reflection nebula, usually indicated by the bluish color.
Camera - Hap Griffin Modified Canon EOS 350D
Lens - Sigma 300 MM f2.8 Lens, with a matched 1.4x Teleconvertor, set at f4 - ISO 800 - (672MM effective focal length)
5 Minutes of exposure (10 x30 seconds) +
20 Minutes of exposure (10 x2 minutes) +
27 Minutes of exposure (9 x3minutes)
Total of 52 munites of exposure
AstroTrac TT320 Astrophotography mount for tracking



This image is of IC 2118, the Witch Head Nebula in the constellation Eridanus. This is also a reflection nebula, with the dust reflecting the light from the bright, supergiant star, Rigel (Beta Orionis), the lower-right star in the constellation Orion. This reflecting dust lies 40 light years from Rigel, and about 700 light years from us.
Camera - Hap Griffin Modified Canon EOS 350D
Lens - Sigma 70-200MM f2.8 zoom lens, set at 200MM, f4 - ISO 800 - (320MM effective focal length)
30 Minutes of exposure (10 x3 minutes)
AstroTrac TT320 Astrophotography mount for tracking

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