The Rosette Nebula (NGC 2237-9) in H-alpha

Posted by CraigAndTammy
on Monday, February 15, 2010

by Craig and Tammy Temple 

 

The Rosette Nebula, NGC2237, is a large star-forming H II region in the constellation Monoceros. It is quite bright at a magnitude of 6.00. NGC2244 is the magnitude 4.80 open cluster of stars in the center of The Rosette.

Telescope: Orion 80ED at f/6
Accessories: William Optics 0.8x reducer/flattener vII; Dew control by DewBuster
Mount: Orion Atlas EQ-G controlled by EQMOD
Guiding: Orion StarShoot AutoGuider on William Optics ZS66
Camera: Canon Digital Rebel T1i, Hap Griffin Baader modified
Filter(s): Astronomik 6nm H-Alpha EOS Clip
Exposure: 29 x 600sec @ ISO 1600 (4hr. 50mins.)
Acquisition: ImagesPlus 3.80b Camera Control
Processing: ImagesPlus 3.80a – Calibrated, registered, Sigma-clipped averaged, DDP
Post-processing: Adobe Photoshop CS4; Noise Ninja; Noel Carboni's Tools
Date(s): January 31, 2010
Temperature(s): 31ºF (dropped to 25ºF)
Moon Phase: Waning Gibbous, 94% illuminated; 61º angular separation from target

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