The eastern Veil Nebula (NGC 6992)

Posted by CraigAndTammy
on Tuesday, July 5, 2011

by Craig and Tammy Temple

After selling some of our astro equipment to fund the purchase of our new QSI583wsg and Astrodon filters, we were without anything to image DSOs for several weeks. Well the camera and filters finally arrived and we finally got some clear skies, so here is our first image, which is also our first bicolor.

Found in the constellation Cygnus (The Swan), the Eastern portion of the Veil Nebula supernova remnant, also known as Caldwell 33, is comprised of three portions. The brighter portion is NGC 6992 and connects with NGC 6995 and IC1340. It is displayed here in false "bi-color" representation. Narrowband filters were used to isolate the hydrogen-alpha (Ha) and oxygen-3 (OIII) emissions and reveal the structure of the nebula. Discovered in 1784 by William Herschel, The Veil complex (or Cygnus Loop) appears dim since it is spread over a large area. The source supernova violently exploded some 5,000 - 8,000 years ago leaving only these expanding filaments behind.

Telescope: Stellarvue Raptor SVR105 @ f/7
Accessories: Stellarvue SFF7-21 flattener; Dew control by Dew Buster
Mount: Orion Atlas EQ-G controlled by EQMOD performance tuned by Astrotroniks
Camera: QSI583wsg CCD @ -10.0C
Guiding: Starlight Xpress Lodestar via PHD
Filters: Astrodon 5nm Ha, OIII
Exposure: 12 x 20min. OIII, 11 x 20min. Ha
Acquisition: ImagesPlus 4.0c Camera Control
Processing: Calibration, DDP in Images Plus v4.0
Post-processing: Adobe Photoshop CS5 using Steve Cannistra’s bi-color combination technique
Date(s): June 30, 2011 & July 2, 2011
SQM reading (begin - end): N1:19.21-19.20; N2:19.00-clouds
Temperature (begin - end): N1:76.8ºF-68.5ºF; N2:78.8ºF-73.8Fº
Location: Hendersonville, TN, USA
Comments
To leave a comment you must be a member of our community.
Login to your account now, or register for an account to start participating.
No one has commented yet.
Join our Community!

Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.

ADVERTISEMENT
FREE EMAIL NEWSLETTER

Receive news, sky-event information, observing tips, and more from Astronomy's weekly email newsletter. View our Privacy Policy.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Find us on Facebook