Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Andromeda (And)  ·  Contains:  Blue Snowball  ·  Copeland's Blue Snowball  ·  NGC 7662  ·  PGC 2198265  ·  PGC 2200346  ·  PGC 2200851
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NGC7662 - Blue Snowball Planetary Nebula in SHO with RGBish stars, David Payne
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NGC7662 - Blue Snowball Planetary Nebula in SHO with RGBish stars

Revision title: Complete Rework of NGC7662

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NGC7662 - Blue Snowball Planetary Nebula in SHO with RGBish stars, David Payne
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NGC7662 - Blue Snowball Planetary Nebula in SHO with RGBish stars

Revision title: Complete Rework of NGC7662

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Description

Blue Snowball PN (NGC7662) in SHO with RGBish starsNGC7662 - Blue Snowball Planetary Nebula (Andromeda) - Oct 2022
Planewave CDK12.5 - AIS6200MM
A-P 1100 GTO AE, Antlia Pro 3nm NB & BB filters
H, O filters: (2 x 21 x 360s exposures, Bin 1x1, Gain 100 &
2 x 21 x 120s exposures, Bin 1x1, Gain 0 &
2 x 41 x 20s exposures, Bin 1x1, Gain 0)
S filter: (22 x 240s exposures, Bin 1x1, Gain 100)
R,G,B filters (3 x 15 x 120s exposures, Bin 1x1, Gain 0)
Total Integration Time = 7.62 hours
The Blue Snowball Nebula in Andromeda is a fairly close (5600 ly est), but small (0.8ly across), and its core occpies 0.28 arcminutes of sky. It is popular with visual observers as it is very bright and appears surrounded by a faint blue disc of nebulosity. Little did I know what a challenge this would be to image and process.
Processing ended up being an exercise in dynamic range and contrast distribution. For imaging, Ha and O filters required shooting at a wide variety of exposure times and gains in order to capture both detail in the bright core, which was overexposed with high gain/long exposures and the dim nebulosity, which was underexposed with low gain/short exposures.  To top it off, the central white dwarf star was only distinctly visible in my S frames.
I had to pull out all of my skills to tame this beast. The best combination, at least for me, was careful stretching with GHS to bring out the nebulosity while protecting the brights both before and after linear HDR composition and HDRMT processing.
What also made processing difficult was that star removal insisted on including the PN as a star because it was the brightest object (including actual stars) in the entire field of view. Only when stretching was nearly completed would the star removal AI decide that the PN was not a star, but then it decided that some real stars weren't stars too.   All HDR work with HDRMT and GHS then had to include the stars, resulting in some star halos.  The lack of star removal also meant that deconvolution and HDRMT were very difficult due to ringing artifacts, and that final replacement of SHO stars with RGB ones was extremely difficult.   Some of the stars were left with Ha signal or halos superimposed on the RGB stars.  In the end, the brightest stars were not acceptable to me, so I cropped them out.  This little PN was the my most difficult image to process to date.

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  • NGC7662 - Blue Snowball Planetary Nebula in SHO with RGBish stars, David Payne
    Original
  • Final
    NGC7662 - Blue Snowball Planetary Nebula in SHO with RGBish stars, David Payne
    B

B

Title: Complete Rework of NGC7662

Description: Dawned on me, what I should have done with the image and missed on the first go around. Huge difference in the core.

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NGC7662 - Blue Snowball Planetary Nebula in SHO with RGBish stars, David Payne