The Tadpoles (IC 410) for AIC

Posted by BobFranke
on Thursday, October 6, 2011

by Bob Franke

Taken from 11/4/2009 to 11/26/2009 in Chino Valley, AZ
RCOS 12.5" Ritchey-Chrétien w/ an SBIG STL-11000 camera using Astrodon 6nm filters

Exposure Details:
SII 570 min (19 x 30 min. bin 1x1)
Ha 360 min (12 x 30 min. bin 1x1)
OIII 450 min (15 x 30 min. bin 1x1)
Lum 180 min (12 x 15 min, bin 1x1)
RGB 270 min ( 6 x 15 min each, bin 2x2)
SII, Ha & OIII are mapped to RGB respectivly with 30% RGB added.

IC 410 is at a distance of about 12,000 light-years, toward the constellation Auriga. The emission nebula surrounds NGC 1893, a young star cluster, which energizes the gas. At the upper right are two interesting objects, about 10 light-years long, that are commonly named "The Tadpoles." Their creation by stellar winds and radiation is most evident in that the Tadpole's tails point directly away from the nebula's central star cluster.

IC410 - The Tadpoles

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