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NGC 6960 - The Veil Nebula (imaged from Fort Davis, TX) |
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Object Information Imaging Details |
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The Veil Nebula (in the constellation of Cygnus) is one of the most beautiful objects in the sky. The Nebula is actually expanding debris from the supernova explosion over 5,000 years ago. The Veil Nebula is approximately 1,500 light-years away. The picture shows the somewhat fainter Western Veil region. Its fine colored wisps of gas are filaments of shocked interstellar gas which occur along the shockwave of the expanding supernova remnants. The expanding material hits the gas at a speed of more than 600,000 kilometers per hour causing the gas to glow. It takes a telescope of at least moderate aperature to see much detail. An OIII or UHC filter will increase the contrast for visual observing. This image was acquired at the 2008 Texas Star Party. Clicking the above image will bring up a higher resolution image. |
Telescope: |
Celestron NexStar GPS 11" |
Camera: |
Canon 300D (type 1 modified) | |
Filter(s): |
n/a | |
Misc. Optics: |
DSLR-compatible Hyperstar | |
Exposures: |
45 x 2 minutes @ ISO 800 | |
Guiding: |
Through Orion ED80 and ToUCam using GuideDog software. | |
Processing: |
Images converted to tifs with Photoshop CS3, then aligned and stacked in Nebulosity. Curves/levels adjustments ith Photoshop CS3. |
Enchanted Skies - Astrophotography by Rich Richins (all images copyright, Rich Richins)