Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Orion (Ori)  ·  Contains:  1 Mon  ·  107 Camilla  ·  11.90  ·  12.28  ·  17 rho Ori  ·  2 Mon  ·  21 Ori  ·  22 o Ori  ·  23 m Ori  ·  238 Hypatia  ·  24 gam Ori  ·  25 Ori  ·  27 p Ori  ·  28 eta Ori  ·  29 e Ori  ·  30 psi Ori  ·  31 Ori  ·  32 A Ori  ·  33 n01 Ori  ·  34 del Ori  ·  36 ups Ori  ·  38 n02 Ori  ·  41 the01 Ori  ·  43 the02 Ori  ·  44 iot Ori  ·  45 Ori  ·  46 eps Ori  ·  47 ome Ori  ·  48 sig Ori  ·  49 d Ori  ·  And 87 more.
Orion constellation, tavaresjr
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Orion constellation

Orion constellation, tavaresjr
Powered byPixInsight

Orion constellation

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Capture carried out on January 2, 2021 in the city of Viana, municipality of the state of Maranhão, Brazil. I like to travel periodically to Viana, my wife's family city, because there the light pollution is not so severe. It is a peaceful city with a beautiful sky. Unfortunately due to automatic stacking, Rigel and Heka (Meissa) were left out.

In this image I used an 85mm lens with 1.4 aperture, stacking 72 frames, each with 5 seconds of exposure.

Text from the space.com website:

While the Orion constellation is named after the hunter in Greek mythology, it is anything but stealthy. Orion, which is located on the celestial equator, is one of the most prominent and recognizable constellations in the sky and can be seen throughout the world. Orion is clearly visible in the night sky from November to February.

Orion is in the southwestern sky if you are in the Northern Hemisphere or the northwestern sky if you are in the Southern Hemisphere. It is best seen between latitudes 85 and minus 75 degrees. Its right ascension is 5 hours, and its declination is 5 degrees. Alnilam, Mintaka and Alnitak, which form Orion’s belt, are the most prominent stars in the Orion constellation. Betelgeuse, the second brightest star in Orion, establishes the right shoulder of the hunter. Bellatrix serves as Orion's left shoulder.

The Orion Nebula — a formation of dust, hydrogen, helium and other ionized gases rather than a star — is the middle "star" in Orion’s sword, which hangs off of Orion's Belt. The Horsehead Nebula is also nearby.

Other stars in the constellation include Hatsya, which establishes the tip of Orion's sword that hangs off the belt, and Meissa, which forms Orion's head. Saiph serves as Orion's right knee. Rigel, Orion’s brightest star, forms the hunter's left knee.

With one exception, all of the main stars in Orion are bright young blue giants or supergiants, ranging in distance from Bellatrix (243 light-years) to Alnilam (1,359 light-years). The Orion Nebula is farther away than any of the naked eye stars at a distance of about 1,600 light-years. One light-year is the distance light travels in a single year, about 6 trillion miles (10 trillion kilometers).

The exception is the star Betelgeuse, which is a red giant and one of the largest stars known. It is also the only star in the sky large enough and close enough to have been imaged as a disk in the Hubble Space Telescope. Observers with a keen eye should be able to see the difference in color between Betelgeuse and all the other stars in Orion.


https://www.space.com/16659-constellation-orion.html

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Orion constellation, tavaresjr