Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Coma Berenices (Com)  ·  Contains:  Black Eye Galaxy  ·  Black-eye galaxy  ·  Evil Eye Galaxy  ·  IC 3917  ·  M 64  ·  NGC 4826
m64 - 180 120 secs unguided subs taken on the 15th April 2020 with an unmodded Nikon d5300 - 400 FL, Stefano Ciapetti
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m64 - 180 120 secs unguided subs taken on the 15th April 2020 with an unmodded Nikon d5300 - 400 FL

m64 - 180 120 secs unguided subs taken on the 15th April 2020 with an unmodded Nikon d5300 - 400 FL, Stefano Ciapetti
Powered byPixInsight

m64 - 180 120 secs unguided subs taken on the 15th April 2020 with an unmodded Nikon d5300 - 400 FL

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Description

This image is the sum of 180 120 secs unguided subs taken on the night of the 15th of April 2020 with an unmodded nikon d5300, a TS65 Quadruplet, and a Primalucelab UHC filter. Stacking with DSS and processing with Astroart 8. Unfortunatelly there are several dust spots on the image, so I have clipped the background in order to "hide" them.

The Black Eye Galaxy (or Sleeping Beauty Galaxy; Messier 64, M64, Evil Eye Galaxy or NGC 4826) was discovered in 1779. It is a fairly close galaxy, just over 24 million light years away.

It has a spectacular dark band of absorbing dust in front of its bright nucleus. This is why it is called the "Black Eye" or "Evil Eye" galaxy. M64 is well known among amateur astronomers because it can be seen in small telescopes. It is a spiral galaxy in the Coma Berenices constellation.

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