The Great Nebula in Orion (M42 & M43)


Great Nebula in Orion



Description:

The Great Orion Nebula is the brightest nebula visible to the naked eye, forming the middle part of the Hunter's sword in the famous constellation Orion.  It is a breathtaking view in dark skies with my 20" Obsession where tendrils of gas can be appreciated.  This is my “second light” with my Canon 20D and scope setup.  I wanted to practice my imaging and processing techniques with an easy and bright target.  The objective of this shot was to observe different ISO settings and the amount of noise from each.  Because no flats or darks were taken and short shutter times, graininess was observed in the darker areas around corners of image.  This shot shows the approximate FOV that my camera/scope has at f/5.

 

Photographic Details:

Date:  January 30th 2006

Scope:  Obsession 20” f/5 on a Tom Osypowski Dual Axis Equatorial Platform, Orion 100mm f/6 Guidescope

Autoguider:  SC1 Mod Celestron Neximage Cam, Shoestring GPINT-PT guide port interface adapter, and Guidedog software

Camera:  Canon 20D DSLR (non-modded), homemade serial control shutter release cable, and DSLRControl remote shutter software

Filters:  None

Conditions:  Temp 48F, Humidity 51%, Winds Calm, Transparency 7/10, Seeing 6/10

Exposures:  20 x 10sec @ 800 ISO, 18 x 10sec @ 1600 ISO, & 16 x 20sec @ 3200 ISO (no flats or darks)

Post-processing:  3504x2336 Raw files converted and resized 1200x800 (non-linear) using Canon’s Digital Photo Professional. Aligned, optimized, stacked, and stretched with Registax 3.  Slight use of Wavlet filtering in Registax as well as color balancing with the Histogram function. ISO 800 & 1600 used for core region. Final processing in Photoimpact SE.


Images Copyright 1999-2008 by Glenn Schaeffer


Return to Main Gallery