Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Ursa Major (UMa)  ·  Contains:  NGC 3073  ·  NGC 3079
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Double Quasar (gravitational lensed) QSO 0957+561 A/B, Kees Scherer
Double Quasar (gravitational lensed) QSO 0957+561 A/B
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Double Quasar (gravitational lensed) QSO 0957+561 A/B

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
Double Quasar (gravitational lensed) QSO 0957+561 A/B, Kees Scherer
Double Quasar (gravitational lensed) QSO 0957+561 A/B
Powered byPixInsight

Double Quasar (gravitational lensed) QSO 0957+561 A/B

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Description

"The Twin Quasar (also known as Twin QSO, Double Quasar, SBS 0957+561, TXS 0957+561, Q0957+561 or QSO 0957+561 A/B), was discovered in 1979 and was the first identified gravitationally lensed object. It is a quasar that appears as two images, a result from gravitational lensing caused by the galaxy YGKOW G1 that is located in the line of sight between Earth and the quasar."....."There is a 417 ± 3 day time lag between the two images." (A light reaches Earth 14 months before B light) Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_Quasar

I wondered if i could image this close pair with the Esprit 100 (550 mm focal length)/ QHY16200 CCD combo. After test images i decided to use 120 seconds, shoot a lot of subs and use 2 x drizzle in APP. The Arcsinh stretch in pixinsight worked best followed by careful curve adjustment. The inset upper-left is a 500% blow-up.

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Double Quasar (gravitational lensed) QSO 0957+561 A/B, Kees Scherer

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