Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Camelopardalis (Cam)  ·  Contains:  IC 342
Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
IC 342 in Camelopardalis, Hap Griffin
IC 342 in Camelopardalis
Powered byPixInsight

IC 342 in Camelopardalis

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
IC 342 in Camelopardalis, Hap Griffin
IC 342 in Camelopardalis
Powered byPixInsight

IC 342 in Camelopardalis

Equipment

Loading...

Acquisition details

Loading...

Description

This is IC-342, a spiral galaxy in the northern constellation Camelopardalis. It lies at a relatively close distance of 10.7 million light years, but because of its location obscured by a dusty arm of our own Milky Way galaxy, it is exceedingly dim...sometimes called the "Hidden Galaxy". IC-342 is 75,000 light years in diameter.

Because of the difficulty in capturing this galaxy due to it's dimness (on "just this side of black", as I often say for such objects), this image is a composite of 88 images aligned and stacked...consisting of nearly 9 hours of exposure in luminance and 2 hours each in red, green and blue...captured over two clear nights...a total of nearly 15 hours.

The telescope is a Planewave 12.5" CDK on an AP-1200 mount, and the camera is a QSI 683-wsg CCD with Astrodon LRGB filters.

Comments

Sky plot

Sky plot

Histogram

IC 342 in Camelopardalis, Hap Griffin