Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Carina (Car)  ·  Contains:  CS Car  ·  NGC 3293  ·  V0361 Car  ·  V0378 Car  ·  V0379 Car  ·  V0380 Car  ·  V0381 Car  ·  V0400 Car  ·  V0401 Car  ·  V0402 Car  ·  V0403 Car  ·  V0404 Car  ·  V0405 Car  ·  V0406 Car  ·  V0412 Car  ·  V0438 Car  ·  V0439 Car  ·  V0440 Car  ·  V0441 Car  ·  V0513 Car
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NGC 3293 The Gem Cluster - SHO, George  Yendrey
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NGC 3293 The Gem Cluster - SHO

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NGC 3293 The Gem Cluster - SHO, George  Yendrey
Powered byPixInsight

NGC 3293 The Gem Cluster - SHO

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Description

This is a Telescope Live dataset from the CHI-1 OTA in El Sauce, Chile, imaging took place during June of 2023.

I was experimenting with some new PixInsight tools/new versions of them when I processed this dataset.  As an open cluster, you might expect the imaging to be in RGB, but this cluster is associated with some significant emission nebula structures.  So this dataset was acquired in Narrowband, Ha, Sii, Oiii.

Because of that, I also sought to emphasize the associated nebula rather than tone it back as many have done.

The first new (to me) tool that I tried out was the new (PI process version) of Bill Blankenship's Narrow Band Normalization tool.  It worked quite well, and I highly recommend it.  However, being new, I was somewhat suspect of the loss of green color band in the initial application.  So I went my normal NB route with color masks, etc.  What I can say on my testing, is I ultimately wound up in the same place as the NB_Normalization arrived at, it just took more steps.  This is on me for not being confident/trusting enough of the tool.

The second tool that I played with (again) was the image merge script developed by Adam Block and friends to merge a Lum Layer with an RGB image.  I also do this with narrowband images, with the Ha image being the usual one selected as a substitute for a Lum channel (as I did in this case).  I'm beginning to believe that this ImageBlend tool is similar to GHS for stretching - it does better with some image sets than others.  In this case I could not quite get to a result that I liked.  So I went back to my "normal" process of using the LRGB channel combination tool and got to a good result in just 3-4 iterations.

I used the NB images with a Pixel Math Algorithm shared with me by Uwe Deutermann to create my RGB Stars image.  I merged the Stars and Starless images with a PM script for image combination.  In between I used the indispensable tools from RC Astro - BlurXterminator, StarXterminator, and NoiseXterminator.

From Wikipedia:
NGC 3293 is an open cluster in the Carina constellation. It was discovered by Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille in 1751.  It consists of more than 100 stars brighter than 14th magnitude in a 10 arc minute field, the brightest of which are blue supergiants of apparent magnitude 6.5 and 6.7. There is also a 7th magnitude pulsating red supergiant, V361 Carinae.

NGC 3293 is associated with the open cluster NGC 3324. Both are fairly young, at around 12 million years old. They show some degree of mass segregation, with more massive stars concentrated near their centers. Neither are dynamically relaxed.

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NGC 3293 The Gem Cluster - SHO, George  Yendrey