Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Serpens (Ser)  ·  Contains:  Eagle Nebula  ·  HD166994  ·  HD167085  ·  HD167331  ·  HD167372  ·  HD167451  ·  HD167497  ·  HD167519  ·  HD167543  ·  HD167592  ·  HD167629  ·  HD167630  ·  HD167631  ·  HD167678  ·  HD167695  ·  HD167742  ·  HD167811  ·  HD167835  ·  HD167836  ·  HD167837  ·  HD167859  ·  HD167899  ·  HD167900  ·  HD167927  ·  HD167948  ·  HD168015  ·  HD168016  ·  HD168045  ·  HD168046  ·  HD168047  ·  And 44 more.
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M16 Eagle Nebula #8, Molly Wakeling
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M16 Eagle Nebula #8

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M16 Eagle Nebula #8, Molly Wakeling
Powered byPixInsight

M16 Eagle Nebula #8

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One of the results of a recent camping trip to my astro club's dark site (dark = Bortle 5 around here, lol).

The Eagle Nebula, also known as M16 in Messier's catalog, is located in the constellation Serpens, just above the more-familiar Sagittarius, right along the Milky Way. It's a huge emission nebula, home to thousands of newborn stars. In the center is a shape Hubble fans will recognize -- the Pillars of Creation! Imaged here in natural color (well, about as natural as one can make it). The columns are largely composed of hydrogen and molecular dust, and there is a lot of star formation happening. All the red you see is the glowing hydrogen gas. There's also oxygen and sulfur gas glowing on optical wavelengths; the sulfur also glows red, and the blue-green of oxygen is drowned out by the sheer amount of hydrogen.

This one is better done in narrowband generally, but because I was out at the dark sky site, I wanted to shoot it in wideband.

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M16 Eagle Nebula #8, Molly Wakeling

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