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Imaging cameras: Moravian G2-8300 Mark II
Mounts: iOptron CEM120EC
Guiding cameras: Starlight Xpress Lodestar Autoguider X2
Software: PixInsight Core version 1.8 · Adobe Photoshop CC 2019 · Main Sequence Software Sequence Generator Pro · PHD 2 Guiding Phd 2.6.3
Filters: Chroma SII 3nm · Chroma OIII 3nm · Chroma Ha 3nm
Accessory: Pegasus Astro Ultimate Power Box · Moravian Instruments EFW-2S-7 MK II Filter Wheel
Dates:Dec. 3, 2019 , Dec. 4, 2019 , Dec. 9, 2019
Frames:
Chroma Ha 3nm: 11x1200" -20C bin 2x2
Chroma OIII 3nm: 11x1200" -20C bin 2x2
Chroma SII 3nm: 10x1200" -20C bin 2x2
Integration: 10.7 hours
Darks: ~30
Flats: ~25
Bias: ~100
Avg. Moon age: 8.78 days
Avg. Moon phase: 62.23%
Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 5.00
Mean SQM: 19.51
Temperature: -1.64
Astrometry.net job: 3113647
RA center: 21h 35' 30"
DEC center: +57° 27' 46"
Pixel scale: 0.581 arcsec/pixel
Orientation: 267.603 degrees
Field radius: 0.318 degrees
Resolution: 2363x3150
Locations: Home Obeservatory, Coven, South Staffs., United Kingdom
Data source: Backyard
A couple of years ago I looked at doing this, I started a sequence and after the first sub it clouded over and that where my plans stayed until the last couple of weeks.
Unusually the weather forecast on all of these nights wasn't great and for the OIII and the SII they were captured on nearly a full moon, last night I was plagued with gusts of wind up to 17mph, but that's all they were ad-hoc gusts and I lost 3 subs.
These were all captured with 1200s subs of Ha, OIII and SII a total of just under 11 hours of data.
This was one of those images that the more you worked on it the more it developed, I had in my mind a "Pillars of Creation" Colour scheme and deliberately didn't not recall or research it again as I knew when it would be right, and to my mind this is. The reality is that I probably haven't spent more that 3/4's of an hour in total working on it as I had some important work to finish.
I was worried about the double stars at the centre overlapping and I did have a go at star reduction, but it seemed to ruin what was actually there and so I have left it.
Because of the wind, the guiding was from 0.24rms up to 0.80rms, but the iOptron 120EC Mount is really performing and handled it easily at a focal length of 2008mm with my GSO RC F7.9 Truss Scope.
I hope you like it as much as I do?
11 x 1200s Ha, 11 x 1200s OIII, 10 x 1200s SII, iOptron 120EC, Moravian G2-8300 MKII, GSO/Altair 10" RC F7.9 Truss, Chroma 2" Unmounted 3nm Filters, Bortle 5 Skies, 19.51 SQM
Here's the Bumf: -
The Elephant's Trunk Nebula is a concentration of interstellar gas and dust within the much larger ionized gas region IC 1396 located in the constellation Cepheus about 2,400 light years away from Earth. The piece of the nebula shown here is the dark, dense globule IC 1396A; it is commonly called the Elephant's Trunk nebula because of its appearance at visible light wavelengths, where there is a dark patch with a bright, sinuous rim. The bright rim is the surface of the dense cloud that is being illuminated and ionized by a very bright, massive star (HD 206267) that is just to the east of IC 1396A. (In the Spitzer Space Telescope view shown, the massive star is just to the left of the edge of the image.) The entire IC 1396 region is ionized by the massive star, except for dense globules that can protect themselves from the star's harsh ultraviolet rays.
The Elephant's Trunk Nebula is now thought to be a site of star formation, containing several very young (less than 100,000 yr) stars that were discovered in infrared images in 2003. Two older (but still young, a couple of million years, by the standards of stars, which live for billions of years) stars are present in a small, circular cavity in the head of the globule. Winds from these young stars may have emptied the cavity.
The combined action of the light from the massive star ionizing and compressing the rim of the cloud, and the wind from the young stars shifting gas from the center outward lead to very high compression in the Elephant's Trunk Nebula. This pressure has triggered the current generation of protostars.
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