|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
ASTRO: PK 59-18.1 AKA Abell 72
PK59-18.1 or Abell 72 is a planetary nebula in Delphinius. I can't find
any distance estimate for it. There's a tight pair of possibly interacting galaxies just below it. The barred spiral is MCG +02-53-005. I can't find any catalog entry for the small spherical one above it. The other "major" galaxy in the image, to the west, is 2MASX J20493655+1335042. It is blue yet a strong IR galaxy. This is because it is likely forming stars like crazy in the core which is hidden by dust. That dust is heated by the intense stars being formed deep inside it. This causes it to shine strongly in IR light. The blue color indicates star formation is going on strongly in less dusty areas as well, though again, the very newest stars are likely hidden behind the dust clouds that gave birth to them and they too will glow in IR light. Slightly older ones have thrown off their dust veils giving the galaxy its strong blue color. Odd how I can image a planetary and then talk about field galaxies. I can't find much on this particular planetary so had to say something. 14" LX200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RGB=2x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME I've attached a full image and a 150% crop to better show the galaxies. 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". |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
ASTRO: PK 59-18.1 AKA Abell 72
that's a nice pair Rick
and a nice image too! looks bit tough with that bright star so close! "Rick Johnson" wrote in message . com... PK59-18.1 or Abell 72 is a planetary nebula in Delphinius. I can't find any distance estimate for it. There's a tight pair of possibly interacting galaxies just below it. The barred spiral is MCG +02-53-005. I can't find any catalog entry for the small spherical one above it. The other "major" galaxy in the image, to the west, is 2MASX J20493655+1335042. It is blue yet a strong IR galaxy. This is because it is likely forming stars like crazy in the core which is hidden by dust. That dust is heated by the intense stars being formed deep inside it. This causes it to shine strongly in IR light. The blue color indicates star formation is going on strongly in less dusty areas as well, though again, the very newest stars are likely hidden behind the dust clouds that gave birth to them and they too will glow in IR light. Slightly older ones have thrown off their dust veils giving the galaxy its strong blue color. Odd how I can image a planetary and then talk about field galaxies. I can't find much on this particular planetary so had to say something. 14" LX200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RGB=2x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME I've attached a full image and a 150% crop to better show the galaxies. 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". |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
ASTRO: PK 59-18.1 AKA Abell 72
My feelings about that star aren't fit for publication!
I am slowly getting better at fighting these bullies into submission. They don't go down easily. Scopes with corrector plates seem to be at a disadvantage with them due to some blue chromatic problems with a single element corrector. Also blue scatters more easily wich doesn't help either. It is a K star but blue scattering was a major issue just the same. I suppose I should be happy it wasn't a O or B star. Rick On 5/13/2010 9:06 AM, Richard Crisp wrote: that's a nice pair Rick and a nice image too! looks bit tough with that bright star so close! "Rick wrote in message . com... PK59-18.1 or Abell 72 is a planetary nebula in Delphinius. I can't find any distance estimate for it. There's a tight pair of possibly interacting galaxies just below it. The barred spiral is MCG +02-53-005. I can't find any catalog entry for the small spherical one above it. The other "major" galaxy in the image, to the west, is 2MASX J20493655+1335042. It is blue yet a strong IR galaxy. This is because it is likely forming stars like crazy in the core which is hidden by dust. That dust is heated by the intense stars being formed deep inside it. This causes it to shine strongly in IR light. The blue color indicates star formation is going on strongly in less dusty areas as well, though again, the very newest stars are likely hidden behind the dust clouds that gave birth to them and they too will glow in IR light. Slightly older ones have thrown off their dust veils giving the galaxy its strong blue color. Odd how I can image a planetary and then talk about field galaxies. I can't find much on this particular planetary so had to say something. 14" LX200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RGB=2x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME I've attached a full image and a 150% crop to better show the galaxies. 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". -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
ASTRO: PK 59-18.1 AKA Abell 72
Excellent image - my image of this object turned out green using G2v
derived parameters. My G2v parameters did not consider galactic dust exinction and reddening - re-doing the G2v calibration is on my to do list for some moonlit night. On Wed, 12 May 2010 13:10:27 -0500, Rick Johnson wrote: PK59-18.1 or Abell 72 is a planetary nebula in Delphinius. I can't find any distance estimate for it. There's a tight pair of possibly interacting galaxies just below it. The barred spiral is MCG +02-53-005. I can't find any catalog entry for the small spherical one above it. The other "major" galaxy in the image, to the west, is 2MASX J20493655+1335042. It is blue yet a strong IR galaxy. This is because it is likely forming stars like crazy in the core which is hidden by dust. That dust is heated by the intense stars being formed deep inside it. This causes it to shine strongly in IR light. The blue color indicates star formation is going on strongly in less dusty areas as well, though again, the very newest stars are likely hidden behind the dust clouds that gave birth to them and they too will glow in IR light. Slightly older ones have thrown off their dust veils giving the galaxy its strong blue color. Odd how I can image a planetary and then talk about field galaxies. I can't find much on this particular planetary so had to say something. 14" LX200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RGB=2x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME I've attached a full image and a 150% crop to better show the galaxies. Rick |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
ASTRO: PK 59-18.1 AKA Abell 72
I've had some odd results but usually due to atmospheric effects
damaging one or more colors. I now search for a star of approximate G2V color in the area and use that as my guide tweaking depending on how far it is off when I suspect the sky is playing tricks. Problem is those tricks vary so what they were at the start of the image isn't what they are at the end so I still end up tweaking some. Once in a while I get lucky and some usable star is in the image and not saturated but that's rare. Here I just used my normal balancing and when it came out rather similar to Adam Blocks AOP image I said "good enough" so didn't apply any tweaks. Though had had really clobber that K0 star beside it. It's gradient was screwing things up something awful. So after dealing with it I was rather surprised to find the nebula's color came out similar to Block's. Though we both had to deal with that $(%# star. He doesn't have a corrector plate to add further scattering like I do. Rick On 5/14/2010 10:42 AM, Glen Youman wrote: Excellent image - my image of this object turned out green using G2v derived parameters. My G2v parameters did not consider galactic dust exinction and reddening - re-doing the G2v calibration is on my to do list for some moonlit night. On Wed, 12 May 2010 13:10:27 -0500, Rick wrote: PK59-18.1 or Abell 72 is a planetary nebula in Delphinius. I can't find any distance estimate for it. There's a tight pair of possibly interacting galaxies just below it. The barred spiral is MCG +02-53-005. I can't find any catalog entry for the small spherical one above it. The other "major" galaxy in the image, to the west, is 2MASX J20493655+1335042. It is blue yet a strong IR galaxy. This is because it is likely forming stars like crazy in the core which is hidden by dust. That dust is heated by the intense stars being formed deep inside it. This causes it to shine strongly in IR light. The blue color indicates star formation is going on strongly in less dusty areas as well, though again, the very newest stars are likely hidden behind the dust clouds that gave birth to them and they too will glow in IR light. Slightly older ones have thrown off their dust veils giving the galaxy its strong blue color. Odd how I can image a planetary and then talk about field galaxies. I can't find much on this particular planetary so had to say something. 14" LX200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RGB=2x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME I've attached a full image and a 150% crop to better show the galaxies. 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". |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
ASTRO: PK 59-18.1 AKA Abell 72
Rick,
you even got the spiral arms of the small galaxy "under" the PN. The PN itself is a nice (although faint) object for city skies when imaged with an OIII filter, but of course the galaxies lose a lot with narrow band... Stefan "Rick Johnson" schrieb im Newsbeitrag . com... PK59-18.1 or Abell 72 is a planetary nebula in Delphinius. I can't find any distance estimate for it. There's a tight pair of possibly interacting galaxies just below it. The barred spiral is MCG +02-53-005. I can't find any catalog entry for the small spherical one above it. The other "major" galaxy in the image, to the west, is 2MASX J20493655+1335042. It is blue yet a strong IR galaxy. This is because it is likely forming stars like crazy in the core which is hidden by dust. That dust is heated by the intense stars being formed deep inside it. This causes it to shine strongly in IR light. The blue color indicates star formation is going on strongly in less dusty areas as well, though again, the very newest stars are likely hidden behind the dust clouds that gave birth to them and they too will glow in IR light. Slightly older ones have thrown off their dust veils giving the galaxy its strong blue color. Odd how I can image a planetary and then talk about field galaxies. I can't find much on this particular planetary so had to say something. 14" LX200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RGB=2x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME I've attached a full image and a 150% crop to better show the galaxies. 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". |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
ASTRO: Abell 2147 and Arp 324 | Rick Johnson[_2_] | Astro Pictures | 2 | March 14th 10 10:39 PM |
ASTRO: Abell 72 | Stefan Lilge | Astro Pictures | 1 | December 22nd 08 05:04 AM |
ASTRO: CTB1 = Abell 85 | Stefan Lilge | Astro Pictures | 1 | November 16th 08 05:41 PM |
ASTRO: Abell 1758 | Rick Johnson[_2_] | Astro Pictures | 3 | June 18th 08 09:46 PM |
Astro: Abell 400 | Rick Johnson[_2_] | Astro Pictures | 2 | January 18th 07 10:04 PM |