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Saturday, March 8, 2025

NGC 281, a New Revision

 I made a new composition out of my new NGC 281 material, the original composition and technical details can be seen here: https://astroanarchy.blogspot.com/2025/01/new-photo-of-ngc-281.html

This new poster format composition brings out the dynamic nature of this target better.


NGC 281
Click for a large image, 2000x2600 pixels

A mapped color image from a light emitted by an ionized elements, 
sulfur=red, hydrogen=green and oxygen=blue


A Closeup







Thursday, March 6, 2025

A Very Deep View to my Soul, IC1848

This is a new photo of the Soul Nebula in Cassiopeia.

A total of 20 hours of H-alpha exposure, along with 6 hours of S-II and O-III combined, allows me to capture intricate details of this relatively bright astronomical cloud of gas and dust.



A Detail of IC1848, the Soul Nebula
Click for a large image, 2100x2300 pixels 

A mapped color image from a light emitted by an ionized elements, 
sulfur=red, hydrogen=green and oxygen=blue



Full Resolution Details
Click for a full size, 2100x2300 pixels

New photo shows some great details with 26 hours of narrowband exposures. Especially this picture shows details that I have never captured nor seen before out of this, usually kind of featureless, part of the Soul nebula, IC1848




Pillar like formations are pointing to a open cluster IC1848 




Older photos of the Soul Nebula

The area of the new photo is marked as a white rectangle, photo from 2014, Celestron EDGE 11"


The Heart and Soul Nebulae in a same field of view, photo from 2010, Tokina AT-x 300mm f2.8

Technical details

Processing workflow

Image acquisition, MaximDL v5.07.
Stacked and calibrated in CCDStack2.
Deconvolution with a CCDStack2 Positive Constraint, 27 iterations, added at 50% weight
Color combine in PS
Levels and curves in PS

Imaging optics, 
Celestron EDGE 14" with 0.7 Focal reducer

Mount, 
MesuMount Mark II

Cameras, 
Imaging camera Apogee Alta U9000M and Apogee seven slot filter wheel
Guider camera, Lodestar x 2 and SXV-AO Active Optics @ 5hz

filters, 
Astrodon 5nm H-alpha, 3nm S-II and 3nm O-III

Total exposure time 30h
H-alpha, 60 x 1200 s, binned 1x1 = 20 h 
O-III,21x 1200 s, binned 2x2 = 3h 
S-II, 15 x 1200 s. binned 2x2 = 3h 



A single calibrated 20 min exposure of 
H-alpha, Bin 1x1
 Click for a full size image.






Tuesday, March 4, 2025

HFG1, a Challenging Planetary in Cassiopeia

 I have planning to shoot this dim, diffused and large planetary nebula for a long time. The imaging season up here 65N is over in few weeks since we'll loose astronomical darkness for six months due to high latitude.

So far I have collected about 20 hours of exposures of light emitted by a triple ionized oxygen, O-III
I think it's very beautiful as it now but I'll add H-alpha light  when ever weather allows.


HFG1
Click for a large image, 2000x2000 pixels

HFG1 in O-III light only



Technical details

Processing workflow

Image acquisition, MaximDL 6
Stacked and calibrated in CCDStack2.
Deconvolution with a CCDStack2 Positive Constraint, 27 iterations, added at 50% weight
Color combine in PotoShop
Levels and curves in PotoShop.

Imaging optics, 
Celestron EDGE 14" with 0.7 Focal reducer

Mount, 
Mesu Mount Mark II

Cameras, 
Imaging camera Apogee Alta U9000M and Apogee seven slot filter wheel
Guider camera, Lodestar x 2 and SXV-AO Active Optics @ 5hz

filters, 
Astrodon 5nm H-alpha, 3nm S-II and 3nm O-III

O-III, 60 x 1200 s = 20h 

Sunday, February 16, 2025

New Tool, a Powerful Dell Precision 7875 Workstation

Workstation computers from Dell are really well-built and come with excellent next-business-day onsite service. I have been using them for a couple of decades for my work. My previous workstation served me well for almost nine years—these kinds of computers do not age as fast as normal consumer PCs.

My old Dell workstation has two ten-core Xeon processors, 128GB of memory, and a decent graphics card. Since I work with 4K and 8K videos, 3D graphics, and run AI locally, my old workstation has become far too slow. It goes to my observatory computer, little overkill for telescope and camera control but works well there.

The new Dell Precision 7875 Workstation features a 96-core AMD Threadripper Pro processor (3.2 – 5.1 GHz), 512GB of RAM, and a 20GB NVIDIA RTX 4000 Ada graphics card. It comes with a standard three-year next-business-day onsite service in case anything goes wrong.

My new display is also from Dell—a 40-inch 21:9 curved Thunderbolt hub monitor with a stunning 5K resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. The curve in the monitor is perfect for correcting perspective distortion, ensuring that straight lines remain visually straight.

I also use an Ergotron monitor arm, so no desk space is wasted, allowing me to position the large display at the optimal distance and orientation with ease


New Workstation and Display