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This exposure was 30 minutes total of LRGB using an SBIG STL-1301E camera
thru an OGS 20-inch F/8.1 RC Cassegrain. The field of view is about 13x16 arc minutes with North at the top. Poor seeing prevailed the night I took this one. I find processing elliptical galaxies to be one of the toughest object types because of the great brightness range from the nucleus out. These galaxies are in the "Leo Spur", a nearby group of galaxies about 32 million light-years away and roughly in the direction of the Virgo cluster. For more info on M-105 and its companions, see: http://www.kopernik.org/images/archive/m105.htm On the same night as I took this image I had shown this group and its neighbors M-95 and M-96 to at least two dozen people. All three galaxies fit into the field of a Meade 40mm SuperWide eyepiece on the 20RC and are pretty easy to see. The Spiral is dimmer than the two ellipticals, but is still an easy visual sight in the 20. Also see this interesting HST page about black holes in the center of galaxies, including an image of the core of M-105: http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/arc...eases/1997/01/ George Normandin |
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![]() George Normandin wrote: This exposure was 30 minutes total of LRGB using an SBIG STL-1301E camera thru an OGS 20-inch F/8.1 RC Cassegrain. The field of view is about 13x16 arc minutes with North at the top. Poor seeing prevailed the night I took this one. I find processing elliptical galaxies to be one of the toughest object types because of the great brightness range from the nucleus out. These galaxies are in the "Leo Spur", a nearby group of galaxies about 32 million light-years away and roughly in the direction of the Virgo cluster. For more info on M-105 and its companions, see: http://www.kopernik.org/images/archive/m105.htm On the same night as I took this image I had shown this group and its neighbors M-95 and M-96 to at least two dozen people. All three galaxies fit into the field of a Meade 40mm SuperWide eyepiece on the 20RC and are pretty easy to see. The Spiral is dimmer than the two ellipticals, but is still an easy visual sight in the 20. Also see this interesting HST page about black holes in the center of galaxies, including an image of the core of M-105: http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/arc...eases/1997/01/ George Normandin It seems hardly worth the effort of color for ellipticals they just don't have any. Big boring blobs of staid stars. If there's any action it's usually due to a black hole at the center (M87 for instance). Though there is a hint of a small bar in 3384. At least when your seeing goes bad you still have round stars. My bad seeing is usually due to warm air rising off the warmer lake surface and it elongates stars vertically. You can tell how tilted the camera is, far from the meridian, by the tilt of the elongation. In winter the ice is always warmer than the night air due to the 32 degree water below it and in the summer it is again warmer than the night air as it is a huge heat sink holding the heat while the night cools rapidly. Only this time of the year or in the fall that I seem to get nights of good seeing when the water is colder than the night air when the water is right at 32 but the nights above freezing. Then that stream of warm air up my bank and by the observatory is not there making for good seeing much of the time -- if the jet stream isn't hanging around. Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
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Very good picture George. These three make a nice group.
Stefan "George Normandin" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... This exposure was 30 minutes total of LRGB using an SBIG STL-1301E camera thru an OGS 20-inch F/8.1 RC Cassegrain. The field of view is about 13x16 arc minutes with North at the top. Poor seeing prevailed the night I took this one. I find processing elliptical galaxies to be one of the toughest object types because of the great brightness range from the nucleus out. These galaxies are in the "Leo Spur", a nearby group of galaxies about 32 million light-years away and roughly in the direction of the Virgo cluster. For more info on M-105 and its companions, see: http://www.kopernik.org/images/archive/m105.htm On the same night as I took this image I had shown this group and its neighbors M-95 and M-96 to at least two dozen people. All three galaxies fit into the field of a Meade 40mm SuperWide eyepiece on the 20RC and are pretty easy to see. The Spiral is dimmer than the two ellipticals, but is still an easy visual sight in the 20. Also see this interesting HST page about black holes in the center of galaxies, including an image of the core of M-105: http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/arc...eases/1997/01/ George Normandin |
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