Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Camelopardalis (Cam)  ·  Contains:  IC 342
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IC 342 “The Hidden Galaxy”, James Peirce
IC 342 “The Hidden Galaxy”
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IC 342 “The Hidden Galaxy”

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
IC 342 “The Hidden Galaxy”, James Peirce
IC 342 “The Hidden Galaxy”
Powered byPixInsight

IC 342 “The Hidden Galaxy”

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Description

IC 342 “The Hidden Galaxy” is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardias, located rather close (a “mere” 7-11 million light years away) to our Milky Way, and measures about 75,000 light years across containing an estimated 100 billion stars. The Hidden Galaxy would be visible in our night sky to the naked eye if not for its position, which we can only observe through gases and dust of our own milky way, serving to dim and obscure it considerably. It can, however, be observed with binoculars given sufficiently clear skies and enough determination or knowhow to locate it.

Imaged on December 8 and December 9 for a total of 6 hours of integration time. Bortle 6. RASA-8 and ZWO ASI 183MC Pro. Lights comprised of 45s and 60s exposures (5hrs) and 1hr of 120s Ha exposures (12nm), which was used to bring out regions of nebulosity. I was a little surprised to find that this subject could have benefited from a fair amount more integration time (at least from my location) as I learned of the extent to which this galaxy is obscured by dust and gases after having decided to photograph it. I imagine my use color calibration process has shifted colors noticeably from the dusty red-shifted colors observed from earth a little more to a "true color" range, but I tried not to push it too far in that direction.

RASA-8, ZWO ASI183MC Pro, iOptron CEM-40EC, December 8-9 2020, 5hrs RGB (45-60s), 1hr Ha (120s)

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IC 342 “The Hidden Galaxy”, James Peirce

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Cloudy Nights