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M13
Click the image for 3/4 (0.85
arcsec/pixel) size wide field display.
Instrument |
12.5" RCOS @
~f/9 (2880 mm fl) 0.643 arcsec / pixel. Shown
resampled to 2.57 arcsec/pixel. |
Mount |
Paramount ME |
Camera |
SBIG STL-11000 w/
internal filter wheel, AstroDon Filters |
Acquisition Data |
5/4/2008 to 5/26/2008
Chino Valley... with CCDAutoPilot3 |
Exposure |
Lum
100 min. (20 x 5 min. bin 1x1)
RGB
180 min. (12 x 5 min. bin 2x2) each |
Software |
CCDSoft,
CCDStack, Photoshop CS w/ the Fits Liberator plugin, and Noel
Carboni's actions.
CCDStack to register,
normalize, data reject, combine and sharpen.
PhotoShop for the
color combine. |
Comment |
North is to the top.
M13, the Great Globular Cluster in Hercules, is a system of stars
numbering in the hundreds of thousands. It is one of the
brightest globular star clusters in the northern sky. At a distance
of 25,000 light-years, the cluster stars crowd into a region 150
light-years in diameter, but approaching the cluster core over 100
stars would be contained in a cube just 3 light-years on a side. For
comparison, the closest star to the Sun is over 4 light-years away.
The orange stars are red giants, which are typically 2000 times
brighter than our sun. Also visible are many hot blues stars
known as "blue stragglers." The most likely explanation for blue
stragglers seems to be that they are the result of stellar
collisions or mass transfer from another star.
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Instrument |
Celestron C11 @ F/6.1
(1705 mm) 1.087 arcsec / pixel |
Mount |
Losmandy G11 |
Camera |
SBIG ST-7 with
CFW-8A color wheel |
Acquisition Data |
7/3/05 & 7/8/05
Near downtown Seattle |
Exposure |
Lum
40 min (4 x 10 min)
Red 40 min (4 x 10, bin 2 x 2)
Green 40 min (4 x 10, bin 2 x 2)
Blue 60 min (4 x 15, bin 2 x 2) |
Software |
CCDSoft, FocusMax,
PhotoShop CS, Auto-Dither was used to dither the luminance
layer. |
Comment |
North is to the
left. |
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