Last night I had the opportunity to put my new Astrodon TrueRGB gen2 filters up to the test. I have been imaging Barnard 344 and wanted to get some RGB data for this. Yesterday there was a 94% moon under a very lightpolluted sky (I live in one of the most lightpolluted areas of the …
Barnard 344 is a dark nebula in the constellation of Cygnus. It’s located close to the star Sadr in the Gamma Cygni Nebula. Barnard 344 is located on the bottom of the image. This region is very rich of dark and emission nebulae. On the image also VanDenBergh 130, a reflection nebula in this region, …
Barnard 344 is a dark nebula in the constellation of Cygnus. It’s located close to the star Sadr in the Gamma Cygni Nebula. Barnard 344 is located on the bottom of the image. (An annotated version can be seen here.) This region is very rich of dark and emission nebulae. On the image also VanDenBergh …
NGC 7000 is also known as the North America Nebula with the so called Gulf of Mexico. In this area the Cygnus Wall can be found. This part is the Mexican and Middle American part of the Nebula. It’s one of the most interesting parts of the nebula because this is a region of active …
NGC 7000 is also known as the North America Nebula with the so called Gulf of Mexico. In this area the Cygnus Wall can be found. This part is the Mexican and Middle American part of the Nebula. It’s one of the most interesting parts of the nebula because this is a region of active …
Click on image for high resolution The nebula Sh2-101 is better known as the Tulip Nebula. This nebula is strong in H-alpha emissions. The nebula has a distance of about 2000 lightyears from Earth. This image also shows the famous Cygnus X-1 system. Cygnus X-1 is the brightest source of hard X-rays in our sky. …
Here are some images and an animation taken on the 8th of July 2013 using my Lunt-60 solar telescope and Robtics ED110 with Herschel prism or Lunt 75mm etalon. Finally here is an animation showing about 100 minutes of solar activity:
full resolution (8 Mp) M27 was discovered by Charles Messier on the 12th of July 1764. This was the first planetary nebula discovered by him. The name Dumbbell Nebula was given by John Herschel later when he took a better look at the shape of the nebula. M27 is the second brightest planetary nebula …