11/11/2020 The Heart and Soul Nebulas

Wednesday night was a good night at the River Ridge Observatory. Crisp temperatures, no wind or dew, and clear steady skies. No technical difficulties either. My goal was to shoot the Heart and Soul Nebulas. Yes, that is their nicknames. Their official names are IC 1805 and IC 1848, respectively. Both are large emission nebulas, I suspect they are part of the same molecular cloud but I don’t know that for a fact. It’s kind of obvious why the one is the Heart Nebula while the other looks more like a fish to me, specifically a coelacanth, and what does a soul look like anyway? Or maybe a boot print in the snow.Both images were shot with my 11″ SCT with Hyperstar adapter to shoot at f/1.9 with the dual narrowband L-eNhance filter to select specific emission bands of light. 12 five minute images stacked together with flats and darks. Then virtually identical processing done in Photoshop.

11/7/2020 The Elephant’s Trunk Nebula

I’ve already posted a couple images from Friday November 7, here is the last one. This is the Elephant’s Trunk Nebula (or IC 1396). I’ve been trying to make this presentable, it needs more data but it’s my first attempt at it. This was a total of 50 minutes integration with the 11″ and Hyperstar. That’s the trunk coming up from the bottom. I’ll keep working on it.

11/6/2020 The Orion and Running Man Nebulas

Later Friday night, I shot this, my first attempt at the Orion Nebula (and nearby Running Man Nebula) for the season. I used the same 11″ SCT with Hyperstar but switched from the light pollution filter to a dual narrowband. This was 60 sixty second images combined and all post processing was done in Photoshop. I need to revisit this, due to its high dynamic range I could shoot some 30 second images and 120 second images and merge with these.

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