Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Canes Venatici (CVn)  ·  Contains:  HD106556  ·  HD107275  ·  M 106  ·  NGC 4217  ·  NGC 4220  ·  NGC 4226  ·  NGC 4231  ·  NGC 4232  ·  NGC 4248  ·  NGC 4258
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MESSIER 106 & FRIENDS, Drew Evans
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MESSIER 106 & FRIENDS

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
MESSIER 106 & FRIENDS, Drew Evans
Powered byPixInsight

MESSIER 106 & FRIENDS

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description

M106 – also known as NGC 4258 – is a spiral galaxy, like our own Milky Way galaxy. The stars you see in the foreground are all in our own galaxy.

In a spiral galaxy, the stars, gas and dust are gathered in spiral arms that spread outward from the galaxy’s center. This view of M106 captures the entire galaxy, detailing the glowing spiral arms, wisps of gas, and dust lanes near its center, as well as the twisting bands of stars and gas at the galaxy’s outer edges. You can also see two dwarf galaxies in the image; NGC4248 in the upper right and PGC391675 in the upper left, as well as several further distant galaxies.

OTA: Celestron 11" RASA 620mm f/2
Mount: Celestron CGX-L
Camera: ZWO ASI294MC Pro
Gain: 120
Cooling Temperature: -10 degrees celsius

Filter: Optolong LPro

8.8 hours total acquisition time (263 x 120s)

Auto-guiding: ZWO ASI290MM Mini and ZWO 60mm Guidescope
Control: ZWO ASIAIR Pro

Calibrated in Astro Pixel Processor with darks and flats
Processed in Pixinsight and Lightroom

Location: Bortle Class 2 skies outside Flagstaff, Arizona
#astrophotography #astronomy #space #stars #galaxy #M106

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MESSIER 106 & FRIENDS, Drew Evans