FSQ fun 15-16 jan 2012

Dick Steinberg

During the unusually clear night of 15-16 january, in addition to the images of 433 Eros presented earlier , a number of wide-field objects were imaged with the 4-inch Takahashi FSQ106 fluorite refractor and Orion SSPro one-shot color camera at Blue Mountain Vista Observatory. (Blatant advertisement: call Frank Colosimo for available space).

The evening started off with a 60-minute wide-field exposure of the Cocoon nebula, IC5146 , with its interesting location at the end of a coal sack in Cygnus, much better seen here than in a recent narrower-field Hyperion image. The central pink region of the Cocoon is a hydrogen emission nebula, while its contrasting bluish envelope shines with Rayleigh-scattered light from nearby stars (a "reflection" nebula). The blue color results from the inverse 4th power wavelength dependence of the Rayleigh scattering process. Thus, blue light at 450 nm is scattered (650/450)^4 or ~4 times more efficiently than 650 nm red light. The same effect gives rise to the blue hue of a clear (remember that?) sky.

The next three objects are familiar fixtures of the winter sky:

Other objects imaged were the highly distorted galaxy in Ursa Major NGC3718   (also see a recent DVAA talk ) and the Canes Venatici galaxy pair NGC4631 (the edge-on "Whale") / NGC4656 (the distorted "Hockey Stick"). The latter two galaxies were discussed in an excellent APOD presentation.

 

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Astroimage webpage:
http://www.physics.drexel.edu/~steinberg/Astro Welcome.html
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