Posts Tagged ‘narrowband’

Pelican Nebula

Friday, October 14th, 2011

Pelican Nebula

Here’s my rendition of the famous Pelican Nebula, the Ha rich neighbor of NGC7000. It took four hours in 15-minute subframes to accomplish this decently clean and signal rich image.

2000 light-years away, it’s a very active star forming region.

A soap bubble and a treasure chest

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

NGC7635 and M52

Only three hours could go into the making of this peculiar portrait, picturing the beautiful Bubble Nebula, aka NGC7635, and the bright open cluster M52.

The Bubble is an area of ionized hydrogen, currently being blown away by the stellar wind of a massive and hot central star, whose mass is believed to be twenty to forty times that of our Sun. The Bubble extends over a diameter of about 10 light-years, lies 11000 light-years away and is a set for very violent and turbulent processes at work.

The Elephant’s Trunk

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

The Elephant's Trunk

Four hours and forty-five minutes went into the making of this rendering of the Elephant’s Trunk, part of the nebulosity around the open cluster IC1396.

The elongated cloud you see in the image, resembling the trunk of an elephant, is really over 20 light-years long, and the whole complex is 2400 light-years away from Earth.

This bright emission area is thought to be a star forming region.

Crescent nebula reprocessed for natural colors

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

Crescent nebula

Here’s a humble attempt to reprocessing the Crescent I did with Gustaaf Prins and (waiting for clearance to disclose name). It’s a composition of red, green, blue, Ha, SII and OIII channels.

Of course when performing this kind of processing, there is usually no pretense of achieving real natural colors. The problems lies mostly in two factors: first, the Ha and SII channels are both reddish, while the OIII channel is greenish blue; second, the intensity of the signal at different bandwidths varies considerably, and if you don’t want to end up with a very color-unbalanced imaged, you need to stretch different channels differently.

This image uses red, Ha and SII (mixed in different percentages) for the red channel, green and OIII for the green channel, and blue, OIII and a pinch of Ha for the blue channel.