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Post by Dragon Man on Jul 24, 2022 16:43:18 GMT
The Centre of our Milky Way Galaxy, the Large Sagittarius Star Cloud. In this image I captured Planetary Nebula IC 4673 for the first time. I've never noticed it in my previous Sagittarius Star Cloud images. Notice that this is the 'LARGE' Sagittarius Star Cloud, not the more commonly known M24 which is actually catalogued as the 'SMALL' Sagittarius Star Cloud They are 9 degrees apart. 200mm f/5 Newtonian, Canon 6D, no filters, 4 X 90 seconds @ 3200iso Stacked in Sequator' Annotated in Astrometry.net Large Sagittarius Star Cloud, open cluster NGC 6520, Barnard 86 Dark Nebula, Planetary Nebula IC 4673. ANNOTATED (Astrometry.net)
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Post by Dragon Man on Jul 24, 2022 17:03:57 GMT
And just so you can see the difference between the Large and Small Sagittarius Star Clouds, here is the SMALL Sagittarius Star Cloud. I imaged this just after I imaged the Large Star Cloud. Only difference is the exposures. This one is 3 x 25 seconds.
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