On Apr 26, 2:10*am, ukastronomy
wrote:
Emission nebulae are given this name because unlike reflection nebulae
they are emitting their own light. This is due to the atoms of gas
absorbing energy from nearby stars and then re-emitting the energy at
a very specific wavelengths. In most cases the dominant emission line
is hydrogen-alpha, or H-alpha that is found in the red part of the
spectrum.
This 9 page web site shows what can be achieved with a fairly small
telescope equiped with a narrow band filter.
http://www.martin-nicholson.info/ast...ogenalpha1.htm
Impressive. We need more images of the same FOV, and 10x better
magnification if possible, using various bandpass filters.
~ BG