Saturday, October 12, 2024

NGC 7331, The Deerlick Group from the Beaver Meadow Observatory (BMO)

 NGC7331 and The Fleas ...

Monday October 7th was our club's imaging group, the Tuesday Night imagers, imaging session for the week at the club's observatory. I was unable to join in person as I had a work meeting, but joined via Zoom once my work meeting was over. The evening started out cloudy, so we worked on getting flats and worked on some processing in PixInsight. It cleared after 9 pm so we slewed the club's 14" Celestron Edge HD to NGC 7331 per a member's suggestion. We managed to collect 21 subs at 300 seconds each for 1.75 hours total exposure. This is my processing of the data.

The image shows the NGC 7331 Group, a collection of galaxies in the constellation Pegasus. The central galaxy, NGC 7331, is a large spiral galaxy with a bright core and well-defined spiral arms. Surrounding it are several smaller galaxies, including elliptical and spiral types, scattered across a star-filled background. The image captures the beauty and diversity of galaxies in a single frame, highlighting the vastness and complexity of the universe.
NGC 7331, The Deerlick Group captured on 10/7 at the BMO

Processing:

All pre and post processing was performed in PixInsight. Pre-Processing: All subs were visually inspected with Blink and subs with issues were removed. All light Frames, Flats, Darks and Dark flats were loaded into WBPP. Linear Post Processing: Background extraction was performed with Auto DBE Script from Seti Astro followed by BXT (correct only). SPCC was used for Color Calibration followed by a full application of BXT. The Stars were removed using StarXT. Starless Linear: Noise was reduced with NXT. The image was made non-linear with HT. Starless Non-linear Post Processing: HDRMultiScaleTransform was used to compress the core of NGC 7331 (mask was used). Saturation and intensity were increased with CT. LHE was applied at 3 Kernel sizes. Unsharp mask was applied and MMT was used to increase sharpness. Exponential Transformation was used to increase intensity. Stars Linear: The Stars image was made non-linear with Seti Astro's Star Stretch script. Stars Non-Linear: Saturation was increased with CT. Starless: Intensity, and contrast were adjusted with various applications of CT. The Stars and Starless images were combined with Pixel Math to produce the final image. 

What is it?

The NGC 7331 Group is a "visual" grouping of galaxies in the constellation Pegasus. It is also known as the Deerlick Group. The large spiral galaxy is NGC 7331 and the four other galaxies that make up the group are NGC 7335, NGC 7336, NGC 7337, & NGC 7340. The four smaller galaxies are also referred to as The Fleas. NGC is a foreground galaxy; the Fleas are much farther away (see "How far is it?" below).

An annotated image of NGC 7331.

How Big is it?

NGC 7331 has a size of 9.3 x 3.8 arcminutes (1 degree is 60 arcminutes) on the night sky. It is about 127,800 light years in diameter (similar in size to our Milky Way Galaxy).

NGC 7335 has an apparent size of 1.3 x 0.5 arcminutes and is about 113,000 light-years in diameter.

NGC 7336 has an apparent size of 0.6 x 0.5 arcminutes and is about 76,800 light-years in diameter.

NGC 7337 has an apparent size of 1.0 x 0.8 arcminutes and is about 95,400 light-years in diameter.

NGC 7340 has an apparent size of 0.9 x 0.6 arcminutes and is about 78,800 light-years in diameter.

How Far is it?

NGC 7331 is located about 47 million light-years (ly) from Earth.

NGC 7335 is located about 310 million light-years (ly) from Earth.

NGC 7336 is located about 430 million light-years (ly) from Earth.

NGC 7337 is located about 320 million light-years (ly) from Earth.

NGC 7340 is located about 310 million light-years (ly) from Earth.

How to find it?

The NGC 7331 Group is located in the constellation Pegasus as shown by the small red square in the Finder Chart below. Dark skies and large aperture are helpful in viewing this group.

A finder chart for NGC 7331

Image Details:

Capture Date: 10/7/2024
Location: North Java, NY (Buffalo Astronomical Association's Beaver Meadow Observatory)
Telescope: Celestron 14" Edge HD w/0.7 Reducer
Camera: OGMA AP26CC
Filter: OGMA 2" UV/IR Cut
Mount: Astro Physics AP1200 Mount
Exposure: 21 exposures at 300 sec / Gain 100 / Offset 100 / -10° C each for a total exposure of 1.75 hours.
Software: NINA, PHD2, and PixInsight


Clear Skies!
Ernie


Thursday, October 3, 2024

NGC 281 - The Pac-Man Nebula

 I wonder how many quarters I spent on Pac Man when I was a kid?

Sunday September 15th was forecast to be clear with poor transparency due to wildfire smoke and a bright Moon. Since I had a vacation day on Monday, I decided to go ahead and image. I setup with the Optolong L-eXtreme dual narrowband filter to help fight against the bright Moon. I started the evening collecting subs on another target that I had collected some data on Friday 9/14. Imaged that target until i lost it to the trees around 12:30 AM and switched to NGC 281. Struggling to get the result I want from the other data, so no post for now. NGC 281 is also known as the Pac-Man nebula as the shape resembles the protagonist of the famous video game from the 80's. I think the resemblance is slightly diminished by deeper exposures like this, as additional details are revealed. 

NGC 281, The Pac-Man Nebula from 9/15.

Processing:

All pre and post processing was performed in PixInsight. Pre-Processing: All subs were visually inspected with Blink and subs with issues were removed. All light Frames, Flats, Darks and Dark flats were loaded into WBPP. Linear Post Processing: Background extraction was performed with Auto DBE Script from Seti Astro followed by BXT (correct only). SPCC was used for Color Calibration followed by a full application of BXT. Noise was reduced with NXT. The image was made non-linear with HT. Non-linear Post Processing: Stars were removed with StarXT. Stars: Saturation was increased with CT. Starless: The Narrowband normalization Process was used to get the "SHO" look. Color, intensity, and contrast were adjusted with various applications of CT. Saturation was increased with CT. LHE was applied at 3 Kernel sizes. Unsharp mask was applied and MMT was used to increase sharpness. The DSE script was used to enhance dark nebula regions. The Stars and Starless images were combined with Pixel Math to produce the final image. 

What is it?

NGC 281 is an HII region in the constellation Cassiopeia. Like most HII regions, it contains emission nebulosity, dark nebulosity, Bok Globules, and an open star cluster (IC 1590). One of the stars in this open cluster, HD 5005, is a multiple star that is helping to ionize the gas, creating the emission nebula.

Annotated image of NGC 281.

How Big is it?

NGC 281 has a size of 35 x 30 arcminutes (1 degree is 60 arcminutes) on the night sky. It is about 41.5 light years in diameter.

How Far is it?

NGC 281 is located about 4,100 light-years (ly) from Earth in the constellation Cassiopeia.

How to find it?

It may be possible to view this object visually (I have never done so). I would suggest a nebula filter (like a UHC or H-beta filter) to improve contrast and make the nebula "pop" in the eyepiece.

NGC 281 is located near the bright star Shedar in Cassiopeia. If you draw an imaginary line connecting Ruchbah and Shedar, NGC 281 would be a little less than 1/4 of the way to Ruchbah, and a bit off the line (towards Andromeda)/

Finder Chart for NGC 281.

Image Details:

Capture Date: 9/15//2024
Location: Eden, NY
Telescope: Askr FRA600 (no reducer)
Camera: ZWO ASI2600MC Pro
Filter: Optolong L-eXtreme
Mount: Sky-Watcher USA EQ6-R Pro
Exposure: 51 exposures at 180 sec / Gain 100 / Offset 50 / -10°C each for a total exposure of almost 2.55 hours.
Software: NINA, SharpCap Pro, PHD2, and PixInsight


Clear Skies!
Ernie

Follow

NGC 7635 - The Bubble Nebula - from The BMO

 Bubblicious ... Thursday November 7th & Tuesday November 12th were our club's ( Buffalo Astronomical Association ) imaging group (T...