2009-09-16-NGC7635-Ha20x795-OIII6x600-Hb8x600-Process4-Large, richiejarvis

2009-09-16-NGC7635-Ha20x795-OIII6x600-Hb8x600-Process4-Large

2009-09-16-NGC7635-Ha20x795-OIII6x600-Hb8x600-Process4-Large, richiejarvis

2009-09-16-NGC7635-Ha20x795-OIII6x600-Hb8x600-Process4-Large

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description

The Bubble Nebula is one of my favourite objects in the night sky. A Emission nebula in Cassiopeia, the shape of this object is caused by the stellar wind from a massive hot Wolf-Rayet star. The star itself is 40 times the size of our sun and is reponsible for a stellar wind moving at 2000 kilometers per second. The rest of the red glow is from a cloud of gas surrounding the bubble itself. The Bubble Nebula is 7100 light-years from Earth and the bubble part is 6 light years in diameter.

Date: 2009-09-10, 2009-09-14 and 2009-09-16

Location: South Common Observatory

Scope: Astro Professional 102ED @ F/7

Camera: Starlight Xpress SXV-H9

Guide Scope: Williams Optics Zenithstar 66

Guide Camera: SX Guidehead

Exposure (Ha as Red and Luminance): 15900 seconds (average 795 seconds)

Exposure (OIII as Green): 6 x 600 seconds

Exposure (Hb as Blue): 8 x 600 seconds

Comments

Histogram

2009-09-16-NGC7635-Ha20x795-OIII6x600-Hb8x600-Process4-Large, richiejarvis