aza > M33 in Triangulum
3 x 15 minute exposures (45 minutes)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Salisbury (Dark sky site)

M33, also known as the Triangulum galaxy, has a diameter of about 50,000 light years. It is the third largest galaxy in the Local Group, a group of galaxies that also contains the Milky Way Galaxy and the Andromeda Galaxy, and it may be a gravitationally bound companion of the Andromeda Galaxy.
aza > M45 in Taurus
12 x 15 minute exposures (3 hours)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Sailsbury (Dark sky site)

M45 is also known as the Pleiades or Seven Sisters. Unfortunately in this close up image the full seven are not visible. This is one of the closest star clusters to us, and is clearly visible to the naked eye as a 'cloudy patch' in the night sky. The cluster is dominated by hot blue stars which are lighting up the dust cloud they are passing through.
aza > IC 1805 in Cassiopeia
26 x 15 minute exposures (6 hours 30 minutes)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Chatham (Light polluted site)

This is the very centre of the Heart Nebula. Click here for a wider view of the whole nebula.
aza > I live in a light polluted town, so I often travel to darker skies to set up my equipment. This comparison image shows you why. Both of these test shots are a stack of 7 x 10 minute exposures, and have had exatcly the same processing applied to each. As you can see the image on the left gets lost in the background, due to the sky being swamped with the towns light pollution, and this was even using a CLS light pollution filter. The image on the right was taken from a darker sky site with no filter, and the target is much brighter and really stands out from the background.

The skies at my light polluted home in Chatham are 4.25 - 4.50 mag, and the dark site at Romney Marsh is 5.25 - 5.50 mag.

This is just a comparison test, so ignore the poor colours. To see the final processed image of M101, please click here.
aza > NGC 281 in Cassiopeia
69 x 15 minute exposures (17 hours and 15 minutes)
Approx. 6 hours per filter (SII, Ha, OIII)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Hoo Peninsula (Fairly dark sky site)

This is my Pacman Nebula data processed by Neil Fleming. It just goes to show how much difference an expert processor can make of a data set. Cheers Neil :)

Please view the full size original to see how well Neil has brought out the colours and detail.
aza > IC 5070 in Cygnus
11 x 20 minute exposures (3 hours 40 minutes)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Chatham (Light polluted site)

Also known as the Pelican Nebula, this is a large area of star formation and evolving gas clouds, located 1,800 light years away.
aza > NGC 6888 in Cygnus
13 x 20 minute exposures (4 hours 20 minutes)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Chatham (Light polluted site)

Also known as the Crescent Nebula, this object is 5,000 light years away. It is formed by the fast stellar wind from the Wolf-Rayet star WR 136 colliding with, and energizing, the slower moving wind ejected by the star when it became a red giant, around 400,000 years ago.
aza > NGC 281 in Cassiopeia
69 x 15 minute exposures (17 hours and 15 minutes)
Approx. 6 hours per filter (SII, Ha, OIII)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Hoo Peninsula (Fairly dark sky site)

This open star cluster with associated nebulosity, also known as the Pacman Nebula, is 10,000 light years away from us, and is in our very own Milky Way. This image uses the Hubble Palette, which is falsely coloured, to reveal more delicate structure than a true colour representation would.
aza > M81 and M82 in Ursa Major
80 x 10 minute exposures (13 hours 20 minutes)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Chatham (Light polluted site)
Published in Sky at Night Magazine, July 2009

M81 (on the right) is a spiral galaxy that forms a pair with the irregular galaxy M82. The distance between the two galaxies is some 150,000 light years. M81 is the largest galaxy within in a group of 34, and is located 12 million light years away from planet Earth. This makes it one of the closet groups to the Local Group, which contains the Milky Way.
M33 in Triangulum
3 x 15 minute exposures (45 minutes)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Salisbury (Dark sky site)

M33, also known as the Triangulum galaxy, has a diameter of about 50,000 light years. It is the third largest galaxy in the Local Group, a group of galaxies that also contains the Milky Way Galaxy and the Andromeda Galaxy, and it may be a gravitationally bound companion of the Andromeda Galaxy.
aza > M33 in Triangulum
3 x 15 minute exposures (45 minutes)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Salisbury (Dark sky site)

M33, also known as the Triangulum galaxy, has a diameter of about 50,000 light years. It is the third largest galaxy in the Local Group, a group of galaxies that also contains the Milky Way Galaxy and the Andromeda Galaxy, and it may be a gravitationally bound companion of the Andromeda Galaxy.
M33 in Triangulum
3 x 15 minute exposures (45 minutes)
Skywatcher 8" Newt
Salisbury (Dark sky site)

M33, also known as the Triangulum galaxy, has a diameter of about 50,000 light years. It is the third largest galaxy in the Local Group, a group of galaxies that also contains the Milky Way Galaxy and the Andromeda Galaxy, and it may be a gravitationally bound companion of the Andromeda Galaxy.
See photo in original gallery.

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A galaxy is a massive, gravitationally bound system that consists of stars and stellar remnants, an interstellar medium of gas and dust, and an important but poorly understood component tentatively dubbed dark matter. Typical galaxies range from dwarfs with as few as ten million stars, up to giants with one trillion stars, all orbiting the galaxy's center of mass. Galaxies can also contain many multiple star systems, star clusters, and various interstellar clouds. The Sun is one of the stars in the Milky Way galaxy; the Solar System includes the Earth and all the other objects that orbit the Sun. There are probably more than 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe. Source: Wikipedia

Our own galaxy, the Milky Way, is 100,000 light years across. The nearest large spiral galaxy like the Milky Way is the Andromeda galaxy, about 2.7 million light years away. As you can see, the Universe is a very large place. Check out this YouTube video to get some scale on the size of Earth. Remember these are only stars, and that each galaxy has many many millions of them!

A nebula is an interstellar cloud of dust, hydrogen gas, helium gas and plasma. In these regions the formations of gas, dust and other materials 'clump' together to form larger masses, which attract further matter, and eventually will become big enough to form stars. The remaining materials are then believed to form planets, and other planetary system objects. Many nebulae form from the gravitational collapse of gas. As the material collapses under its own weight, massive stars may form in the center, and their ultraviolet radiation ionises the surrounding gas, which creates plasma, making it visible at optical wavelengths. These are sites where star formation occurs. The formed stars are sometimes known as a young, loose cluster.

Some nebulae are formed as the result of supernova explosions, the death throes of massive, short-lived stars. The materials thrown off from the supernova explosion are ionized by the energy and the compact object that it can produce. Other nebulae may form as planetary nebulae. This is the final stage of a low-mass star's life, like Earth's Sun. Stars with a mass up to 8-10 solar masses evolve into red giants and slowly lose their outer layers during pulsations in their atmospheres. When a star has lost a sufficient amount of material, its temperature increases and the ultraviolet radiation it emits is capable of ionizing the surrounding nebula that it has thrown off. The nebula is 97% Hydrogen and 3% Helium with trace materials. The main goal in this stage is to achieve equilibrium. Source: Wikipedia

Narrowband filters are designed to capture specific wavelengths of light. There is a large class of celestial objects known as emission nebulae, and their name arises from the fact that they are actually emitting their own light (as opposed to reflection nebulae, which shine by reflected starlight). Planetary nebulae are normally considered a separate class of objects than emission nebulae, since they represent a very different phenomenon (star death instead of star birth), but for CCD imaging purposes, they can also be considered emission nebulae as they are emitting their own light. Supernova remnants also fall into this category, so objects like the Ring Nebula, Dumbell Nebula, Veil Nebula, and Crab Nebula are all potential targets for narrowband imaging as well.

Narrowband filters do not attempt to replicate the spectral sensitivity of the human eye. Therefore, color images created from these filters are called false color images. Typically, three filters are used and each is assigned to one channel of an RGB image. One filter becomes the red part of an image, one becomes the green part, and the third is the blue part. Once combined, each color represents a particular wavelength of light and hence a particular element in the gas cloud. In addition to being a pretty picture, a narrowband image is also scientifically interesting (which is why these types of filters are used on the Hubble Space Telescope and other professional instruments). Source: Starizona

Star clusters or star clouds are groups of stars. Two types of star clusters can be distinguished: globular clusters are tight groups of hundreds of thousands of very old stars which are gravitationally bound, while open clusters, a more loosely clustered group of stars, generally contain less than a few hundred members, and are often very young. Globular clusters are roughly spherical groupings of from 10,000 to several million stars, packed into regions of from 10 to 30 light years across. They commonly consist of very old stars, just a few hundred million years younger than the universe itself. Source: Wikipedia

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