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The Omega Nebula (a.k.a. M17, Swan Nebula) taken in my back patio from late April through early August, 2023. The Omega Nebula is about 5 or 6 thousand or so light-years away. It can be seen from Earth in the constellation Sagittarius.
Here's a slight crop of the image:
The Omega nebula gets its name because when observed visually with a small telescope or binoculars it kind of looks like a bright shard of light enveloped by an ornate, Greek uppercase omega, Ω.
It's also called the Swan Nebula, presumably because if you turn around and observe it from the opposite orientation (upside down from the orientation shown in my image) you might be able to make out a swan-like shape if your skies are dark enough. I tried that by turning my narrowband image upside down but I can only see a maniacal, undead zombie cobra snake. I think I'll just stick with omega.
Equipment:
Explore Scientific 80ED-FCD100
Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Pro
Orion Field Flattener for Short Refractors
Off-axis guider (OAG) with guide camera
Baader 3.5/4nm Ultra-Narrowband filter set
ZWO ASI2600MM-Pro main camera
The Greek letter Ω is commonly used for all sorts of constants and variable names in cosmology & astrophysics, other physics, and mathematics (and the symbol for the unit of resistance, the Ohm, in engineering).
Software:
N.I.N.A.
PHD2 guiding
PixInsight with RC-Astro plugins
This episode was brought to you by the letter Ω.
Integration:
Location: San Diego
Bortle class 7 (maybe 8 ) skies
All subframes binned 1x1
Stacked using the drizzle algorithm
SHO mapping
SII: 97×600s = 16.17 hrs
Hα: 71×600s = 11.83 hrs
Oiii: 89×600s = 14.83 hrs
Total integration time: 42.83 hours.
Here's a slight crop of the image:
The Omega nebula gets its name because when observed visually with a small telescope or binoculars it kind of looks like a bright shard of light enveloped by an ornate, Greek uppercase omega, Ω.
It's also called the Swan Nebula, presumably because if you turn around and observe it from the opposite orientation (upside down from the orientation shown in my image) you might be able to make out a swan-like shape if your skies are dark enough. I tried that by turning my narrowband image upside down but I can only see a maniacal, undead zombie cobra snake. I think I'll just stick with omega.
Equipment:
Explore Scientific 80ED-FCD100
Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Pro
Orion Field Flattener for Short Refractors
Off-axis guider (OAG) with guide camera
Baader 3.5/4nm Ultra-Narrowband filter set
ZWO ASI2600MM-Pro main camera
The Greek letter Ω is commonly used for all sorts of constants and variable names in cosmology & astrophysics, other physics, and mathematics (and the symbol for the unit of resistance, the Ohm, in engineering).
Software:
N.I.N.A.
PHD2 guiding
PixInsight with RC-Astro plugins
This episode was brought to you by the letter Ω.
Integration:
Location: San Diego
Bortle class 7 (maybe 8 ) skies
All subframes binned 1x1
Stacked using the drizzle algorithm
SHO mapping
SII: 97×600s = 16.17 hrs
Hα: 71×600s = 11.83 hrs
Oiii: 89×600s = 14.83 hrs
Total integration time: 42.83 hours.
Last edited:
