Edge-on galaxy NGC 891 in Andromeda

Posted by Rod Pommier
on Sunday, May 29, 2016

Telescope/Mount: Celestron Compustar C14 SCT with AstroPhysics 0.75x focal reducer (f/8). Camera: SBIG STL 11000M with Baader Planetarium LRGB filters. SBIG AO-L adaptive optics at 7 Hz.
Location: Pommier Observatory, Portland, OR, USA.
Dates: 2013-11-24 through 2014-11-28.
Exposures: LRGB=260:120:120:120 minutes = 10 hours, 20 minutes total exposure.

NGC 891 is a class SA galaxy in the constellation Andromeda. It lies at a distance of about 30 million light-years. We see it nearly perfectly edge-on, which casts its dust lane, with numerous vertical projections, in silhouette against the galaxy's yellow central bulge and peripheral blue spiral arms. Interestingly, this same dust would render our own Milky Way galaxy invisible from within NGC 891.

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