Arp 273 - The Rose Galaxy, ADBjester

Arp 273 - The Rose Galaxy

Arp 273 - The Rose Galaxy, ADBjester

Arp 273 - The Rose Galaxy

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description



Also called the Rose Galaxy, the two galaxies of Arp 273, about 200 million light years distant, are separated by less than the width of the Milky Way. Gravity is stretching the spiral arms of both, which may eventually merge into a single galaxy.

The field of view is about as tall as the full moon. The two bright stars with diffraction spikes are in our galaxy.

Processed as RGB over L with data taken from iTelescope.net's T7 scope, a 17" Planewave CDK with an 11 MP FLI camera:

26 x 600s of Luminance

08 x 600s of Red

08 x 600s of Visible (as Green)

12 x 600s of Blue

9 hours total exposure time.

Comparable land-based images from pros include Adam Block's APOD:

apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap081115.html

The Hubble image is available here:

www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/science/hubble-rose-gallery.html

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Histogram

Arp 273 - The Rose Galaxy, ADBjester