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The Medulla Nebula |
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About This Photograph
Over 130 hours of exposure time through two different telescopes, using special filters that isolate light from sulfur (yellow), hydrogen (red), and oxygen (blue), were required to produce this photograph of the extremely faint Medulla Nebula. Also known as Abell 85 and CTB-1, it is a supernova remnant, the remains of a star that exploded after consuming most of its hydrogen fuel around 10,000 years ago. The fast-moving shell of gas is now expanding into a region of diffuse, patchy gas and dust that contains even fainter filaments, likely the remains of even older supernovas.
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Technical Details |
Optics: | Takahashi FSQ-106 EDX4, PlaneWave 14" CDK | Camera: | QHY600M, STX-16803 | Mount: | Paramount MX+, Paramount ME-II | Filters: | Chroma 3nm [SII], Hâº, [OIII] | Dates/Times: | 23 October - 6 December 2020 | Location: | RC-Astro North Observatory at New Mexico Skies | Exposure Details: | [S II]:Hα:[O III] = 46:40:45 hours (131 hours total) | Acquisition: | MaxIm DL 6, ACP Expert | Processing: | PixInsight, Photoshop | |
Publication Data for this Photograph
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