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. This cosmic elephant's trunk is over 20 light-years long. The false-color view was recorded through narrow band filters that transmit the light from hydrogen (in green), sulfur (in red), and oxygen (in blue) atoms in the region. The resulting composite highlights the bright swept-back ridges that outline pockets of cool interstellar dust and gas. Such embedded, dark, tendril-shaped clouds contain the raw material for star formation and hide protostars within the obscuring cosmic dust. [description text adapted from wikipedia and NASA APOD]. All sub exposures were acquired from my backyard on Sept, 24-27 2013. - 17 x 30m Ha (5nm) - 20 x 30m OIII (3nm) - 26 x 30m SII (3nm) Total exposure time: 31.5 hours Equipment: Main Camera: QSI 583 WSG Guide Camera: SXV Lodestar (on OAG) Mount: Astro-Physics Mach 1 Scope: Explore Scientific 102 f/7 (FL: 696mm) Image Aquisition software MaximDL Registed, Calibrated and Stacked in MaximDL Post Processed with PixInsight 1.8 and Photoshop CS6 Astrometry annotations: Center (RA, Dec):(323.892, 57.475) Center (RA, hms):21h 35m 34.133s Center (Dec, dms):+57° 28' 28.609" Size:1.47 x 1.11 deg Radius:0.923 deg Pixel scale:1.6 arcsec/pixel Up is -4.32 degrees E of N
(slight reprocess and rotation to better see "the wizard") Description from NASA APOD: Located only 8,000 light years away, the Wizard nebula, pictured above, surrounds developing open star cluster NGC 7380. Visually, the interplay of stars, gas, and dust has created a shape that appears to some like a fictional medieval sorcerer. The active star forming region spans 100 about light years, making it appear larger than the angular extent of the Moon. The Wizard Nebula can be located with a small telescope toward the constellation of the King of Aethiopia (Cepheus). Although the nebula may last only a few million years, some of the stars being formed may outlive our Sun. All sub exposures were acquired from my backyard on Oct, 1-4 2013. - 25 x 30m Ha (5nm) - 25 x 30m OIII (3nm) - 25 x 30m SII (3nm) Total exposure time: 37.5 hours Equipment: Main Camera: QSI 583 WSG Guide Camera: SXV Lodestar (on OAG) Mount: Astro-Physics Mach 1 Scope: Celestron Edge HD 8" with 0.7x reducer (FL: ~1480mm) Image Aquisition software MaximDL Registed, Calibrated and Stacked in MaximDL Post Processed with PixInsight 1.8 and Photoshop CS6