Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Taurus (Tau)  ·  Contains:  Maia nebula  ·  Merope nebula  ·  NGC 1432  ·  NGC 1435  ·  The star 18Tau  ·  The star Atlas (27Tau)  ·  The star Celaeno (16Tau)  ·  The star Electra (17Tau)  ·  The star Merope (23Tau)  ·  The star Pleione (28Tau)  ·  The star Sterope I (21Tau)  ·  The star Taygeta (19Tau)  ·  The star ηTau
Pleiades, 404timc
Pleiades
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Pleiades

Pleiades, 404timc
Pleiades
Powered byPixInsight

Pleiades

Equipment

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Description

The Pleiades is the most famous of all open star clusters, containing around 500 members. This young cluster is easily visible to the unaided eye and resembles a smaller version of the Big Dipper. A faint veil of nebulosity surrounds the brightest Pleiades members. This nebulosity is not a remnant of the gas cloud where the Pleiades was born, but a chance cloud of dust that the cluster is passing through. In some ancient cultures, ceremonies to honor the dead were held on the day when the Pleiades reached its highest point in the sky at midnight. Ancient Aztecs believed the Pleiades would be overhead at midnight the day the world ended.

Picture Info:

Location – Sharon, Georgia

Date – September 29, 2011

Lens – Stellarvue SV80ED Refractor f/5.6

Mount – Atlas EQ-G

Guidescope – Orion 50mm

Camera – Modified Canon T2i

Total Exposure – 1 hour and 50 minutes

Sub Length – 5 Minutes

ISO - 1600

Filter - Hutech LPS

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Pleiades, 404timc

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