Contains:  Solar system body or event
M44, The Beehive and the Total Lunar Eclipse of January 20-21, 2019, John O'Neal, NC Stargazer

M44, The Beehive and the Total Lunar Eclipse of January 20-21, 2019

M44, The Beehive and the Total Lunar Eclipse of January 20-21, 2019, John O'Neal, NC Stargazer

M44, The Beehive and the Total Lunar Eclipse of January 20-21, 2019

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Description

This image shows the close proximity of M44, The Beehive to the Total Lunar Eclipse of January 20-21, 2019. I processed this image to look as close as possible to the way I viewed the Eclipse naked eye from my backyard observatory in Statesville, NC.

The Beehive Cluster (also known as Praesepe (Latin for "manger"), M44, NGC 2632, or Cr 189), is an open cluster in the constellation Cancer. It is one of the nearest open clusters to Earth, containing a larger population of stars than other nearby bright open clusters. Under dark skies, the Beehive Cluster looks like a small nebulous object to the naked eye; as known since ancient times. Classical astronomer Ptolemy described it as "nebulous mass in the breast of Cancer", and it was among the first objects that Galileo studied with his telescope.

The starry background image is a single 2 second exposure @ 6400 iso with aCanon EF 80-200mm Zoom Lens, set at 80mm, f/4.5. The Eclipsed Moon layer was shot using the same Camera/Lens combo but was only a 1/20 second exposure, later added onto the first layer to form this single image.

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M44, The Beehive and the Total Lunar Eclipse of January 20-21, 2019, John O'Neal, NC Stargazer

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