Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Taurus (Tau)  ·  Contains:  Barnard's Merope Nebula  ·  IC 349  ·  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
The Pleiades, DeepSpaceDad
The Pleiades
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The Pleiades

The Pleiades, DeepSpaceDad
The Pleiades
Powered byPixInsight

The Pleiades

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description

The Seven Sisters.

Edit: I re-uploaded the photo because the luminance channel made such a huge difference in the faint dust. So this is ver. 2. Please enjoy!

Lately I've been showing you emission nebula. These are nebula that are excited by radiation and emit their own light. Similar to a neon sign. The nebula we are looking at today is a reflection nebula. It's illuminated by light from massive blue stars bouncing off of it. This object is commonly referred to as M45, the Pleiades, or the Seven Sisters and is something you can see with the naked eye. Go look for it to the east at 10pm this time of year. It'll be about 30° off of the horizon. A big blue blotch. It's fantastic to look at even in a decent pair of binoculars.

I'm not finished with this project but it's close enough for social media and I'm bored so I'll post it. This is only the color data shot with Astronomik's deep sky RGB set. It's not bad but the halos on the green filter are bonkers. I'm currently working on a luminance channel with an L-pro filter but I might get distracted before I finish. 

Acquisition details.

Celestron Edge HD 11 w V4 Hyperstar
ASI2600MM
Astronomik deepsky RGB set
Optolong L-pro for luminance.

5 hours of 1 minute exposures per RGB filter.
7 hours on luminance.
22 hours total integration.

Capture in NINA
Process in Pixinsight

Comments

Sky plot

Sky plot

Histogram

The Pleiades, DeepSpaceDad