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Post by Dragon Man on Jan 20, 2023 17:33:29 GMT
HAPPY NEW YEAR 20th January and the sky was sort of clear, so I attacked it In between occasional cloud, misty foggy stuff, and wind gusts I managed to get three happy snaps of Objects I haven't imaged before. Two of them in the Large Magellanic Cloud and neither of them is the Tarantula Nebula The third image is from the Constellation 'Reticulum'. I have also added labels on the images done through Astrometry website The usual gear: Canon 6D, 150mm f/5 Newtonian, EQ6, captured in BackyardEOS. Lets go inside the Large Magellanic Cloud:First up is Galaxy NGC 1809 Faintly visible through the LMC Galaxy surrounded by Globular Clusters and Open Clusters. (90 seconds x 6 frames, stacked in Sequator) . . . and Nebulae/Clusters NGC 1763 and NGC 1769, Globular Cluster NGC 1783, and many clusters in the whole area. (90 seconds x 5 frames, stacked in Sequator) And now off to Reticulum to see Galaxies NGC 1313 and 1313A. This area of the sky is quite barren of objects so you really have to search for something to image in there. (90 seconds x 4 frames, stacked in Sequator)
and some super grainy close-ups from each Image
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