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Sh2-115

$52.50

 SH2-115   Sharpless 115 stands just north and west of Deneb, the bright star at the top of the Northern Cross, aka Cygnus the Swan. Noted in the 1959 catalog done by astronomer Stewart Sharpless as SH2-115, the faint but lovely emission nebula lies along the edge of one of the outer Milky Way’s giant molecular Shining with the light of ionized ions of hydrogen, sulfur, and oxygen in this Hubble palette color composite image, the nebular glow is powered by hot stars in star cluster Berkeley 90 in the center right of the image. The green color comes from Hydrogen emission, the red color comes from Sulfur and the blue color from Oxygen.  The cluster stars are likely only 100  years old or so and are still embedded in Sharpless 115. But the stars’ strong winds and radiation have cleared away much of their dusty cloud. At the emission nebula’s estimated distance, this cosmic clouds spans just under 100 light-years. The image was taken through a Planewave 20″ telescope and a Finger Lake Instruments PL16803 camera which has a square 38mm CCD chip. To make this image there  were a total of 65, 20 minute subimages taken over a period of 28 hours.

 

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Optics: 20″ Planewave CDK20
Mount: Software Bisque Paramount ME II
Camera: FLI PL16803
Filters: Astrodon Ha, Sii, Oiii 3nm
Dates/Times:  Sept 2019
Location: Adler Earth and Sky Observatory, Jackson Hole, WY
Exposure Details: Ha=24x20min, 2:2 , Sii=19x20min, 4:4, Oiii=22x20min, 4:4, total 65 images, 28 hr
Acquisition & Guiding: MaximDL/TheSkyX, MOAG, SBIG STi
Processing: MaximDL, Photoshop CC2019