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Old 11-08-2024, 08:49 PM
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strongmanmike (Michael)
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The Devils Mask

Got some clear skies over the New Moon and along with finishing off a bigger project, decided to hit the very cool trio of small galaxies in Pavo known as the Devils Mask (because viewed in a certain orientation, together they look a bit like an evil face).

The conditions were favourable for a good whack of the capture time with FWHM measured in raw subs, using MaximDL, ranging between a good 1.7" to a pretty soft 2.3". To get the best detail out of the small 2 arc min sized galaxies, I used about three hours worth of the best subs (FWHM < 1.9") for the main galaxy trio region and the whole 4.1hrs Lum with FWHM < 2.2"(and scrapped the rest) for the full field.

At 190 Million light years these babies are pretty small, each only 2 arc min in size, so I am pushing the limits of an 1120mm FL F3.8 Newt trying to capture fine detail in such a small object but the conditions never the less allowed for a respectable result again on what is a challengingly small target using an image scale of 0.84"/pix

All capture details are under the images

The Devils Mask: Pbase and Astro Bin

Go for a surf around countless galaxies in the full frame full res HERE

Cheers

Mike
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Last edited by strongmanmike; 12-08-2024 at 03:14 PM.
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Old 12-08-2024, 06:48 AM
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Hi Mike,
that's an impressive picture - well done.


cheers
Allan
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Old 12-08-2024, 08:11 AM
Startrek (Martin)
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Mike,
Another one of your unique excellent Galaxy images
Well done !!

Cheers
Martone
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Old 12-08-2024, 11:09 AM
Dave882 (David)
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wow Mike that exceptional. Plenty of fine detail and the colour is natural and just gorgeous. I sometimes imagine if we could zoom in to some of those background beauties - what treasures we could find. That spiral galaxy on the far left is really interesting...
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Old 12-08-2024, 03:17 PM
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strongmanmike (Michael)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alpal View Post
Hi Mike,
that's an impressive picture - well done.


cheers
Allan
Quote:
Originally Posted by Startrek View Post
Mike,
Another one of your unique excellent Galaxy images
Well done !!

Cheers
Martone
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave882 View Post
wow Mike that exceptional. Plenty of fine detail and the colour is natural and just gorgeous. I sometimes imagine if we could zoom in to some of those background beauties - what treasures we could find. That spiral galaxy on the far left is really interesting...
Cheers Allan, Martone

Yes I agree Dave, certainly HST has zoomed in on quite a few of, what we would call background galaxies...and made them look like our foreground ones, that's for sure

Mike
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Old 12-08-2024, 04:48 PM
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Originally Posted by strongmanmike View Post
Cheers Allan, Martone

Yes I agree Dave, certainly HST has zoomed in on quite a few of, what we would call background galaxies...and made them look like our foreground ones, that's for sure

Mike



Hi Mike,
well - it seems like Hubble zoomed in on only two of them here:
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_67...03_(Color).png


Also - the 2 other bright galaxies in your image are:
IC 4845 and IC4842.
https://cseligman.com/text/atlas/ic48.htm#ic4845
https://cseligman.com/text/atlas/ic48.htm#ic4842


wide field annotated here:
https://www.astrobin.com/suu8is/


A further note:
we are also in a cosmic dance as part of 3 galaxies:
Milky Way, Andromeda M31 and Triangulum M33.



https://earthsky.org/clusters-nebula...lar-challenge/



Quote:
The fate of the Triangulum galaxy

It’s well known that the Andromeda galaxy is moving toward our Milky Way and that a collision between the two galaxies will occur some 4 billion years from now.

Meanwhile, the fate of the Triangulum galaxy isn’t known for certain. It might someday be torn apart and absorbed by the Andromeda galaxy. It might participate in the collision between the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies. Two other possibilities are a collision with the Milky Way before Andromeda arrives or an ejection from the Local Group.

cheers
Allan
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Old 12-08-2024, 05:11 PM
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GUS.K (Ivan)
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Thanks for sharing Mike, great capture. I spent Friday night observing this and other galaxies in Pavo through my 18 inch scope.
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Old 13-08-2024, 09:37 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alpal View Post
Hi Mike,
well - it seems like Hubble zoomed in on only two of them here:
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_67...03_(Color).png


Also - the 2 other bright galaxies in your image are:
IC 4845 and IC4842.
https://cseligman.com/text/atlas/ic48.htm#ic4845
https://cseligman.com/text/atlas/ic48.htm#ic4842


wide field annotated here:
https://www.astrobin.com/suu8is/


A further note:
we are also in a cosmic dance as part of 3 galaxies:
Milky Way, Andromeda M31 and Triangulum M33.

https://earthsky.org/clusters-nebula...lar-challenge/

cheers
Allan
Interesting stuff Allan, be cool to see our night sky with three large galaxies spread across it, huh? That HST shot is so cool huh? Wonder what civilisation/s will get to witness that?

Quote:
Originally Posted by GUS.K View Post
Thanks for sharing Mike, great capture. I spent Friday night observing this and other galaxies in Pavo through my 18 inch scope.
Cheers Ivan, yeah I have an 18" Dob too, under excellent skies, had several observing sessions with it but haven't looked at this trio though?...must remember to take a peak this season, I'm sure it will be worth it, thanks for the prod

Mike
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  #9  
Old 13-08-2024, 10:48 AM
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Now that does look like a Devils mask when you orientate the image correctly
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Old 13-08-2024, 10:58 AM
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rmuhlack (Richard)
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Nice work Mike. It looks like this latest effort has provided a deeper and more detailed result compared with your 2013 image.
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  #11  
Old 13-08-2024, 01:54 PM
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Quote:
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Now that does look like a Devils mask when you orientate the image correctly
Indeed

Quote:
Originally Posted by rmuhlack View Post
Nice work Mike. It looks like this latest effort has provided a deeper and more detailed result compared with your 2013 image.
Yes, a consistent improvement is evident between my current and previous sites, both in terms of seeing and contrast as well as achievable depth per unit time, it's great. The seeing conditions for this one weren't even the best I get, fairly regularly now, so I am getting annoyed every time the seeing isn't less than 1.7" now (my most frequent measurement in raw subs) ... I want it ALL the time now!!

Mike

Mike
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Old 13-08-2024, 10:09 PM
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Great result Mike.
Lots of detail in a dim target.
Greg.
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  #13  
Old 14-08-2024, 02:09 PM
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Great result Mike.
Lots of detail in a dim target.
Greg.
Thanks Greg, I have decided I need a 17" CDK

Mike
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Old 14-08-2024, 05:59 PM
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petershah (Peter Shah)
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I love this Mike....beautiful colour balanced
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  #15  
Old 15-08-2024, 10:14 AM
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I love this Mike....beautiful colour balanced
Thanks Pete, it's a cool trio

Mike
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Old 16-08-2024, 02:22 PM
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Thanks Greg, I have decided I need a 17" CDK

Mike
haha. Mine is up on the PME ready to be used.

Greg.
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  #17  
Old 16-08-2024, 08:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by strongmanmike View Post
Thanks Greg, I have decided I need a 17" CDK

Mike
Hi Mike,
A 17" CDK - that's a lot of money.
You could start a whole new thread on that?
Some quick calculations not taking into account secondary obstruction sizes - which I suppose you have already done?
The 17" at f6.8 will be 38% slower than your 12" f3.8 Newt.
Focal length = 2936mm.
With the CDK Focal reducer = 0.66.
Focal length = 1813 mm -
speed 43% faster than your Newt.
Using your camera at 4.54 micron pixel size - the ratios are:

With Newt FL = 1158 mm = 0.81 arcsec/pix.
With CDK at FL = 2936 mm = 0.32 arcsec/pixel.
With CDK reducer FL = 1813 mm = 0.52 arcsec/pixel.

Conclusions.
using the principles of the Nyquist sampling Theorem.
The full focal length of 2936 mm would confirm once and for all
if you are getting less than 1 arc second seeing.
The 0.66 reducer would allow you to take images faster than your Newt now.
You could run a much larger camera sensor without vignetting.
The 10" back focus of the CDK would allow you to install adaptive optics
which would take full advantage of the seeing.
Would you break the 1 arc second barrier?
Would you get some pictures as good as CHART32 on some nights?

cheers
Allan
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  #18  
Old 17-08-2024, 11:37 AM
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Originally Posted by alpal View Post



A 17" CDK - that's a lot of money.
You could start a whole new thread on that?
Some quick calculations not taking into account secondary obstruction sizes - which I suppose you have already done?
The 17" at f6.8 will be 38% slower than your 12" f3.8 Newt.
Focal length = 2936mm.
With the CDK Focal reducer = 0.66.
Focal length = 1813 mm -
speed 43% faster than your Newt.
Using your camera at 4.54 micron pixel size - the ratios are:

With Newt FL = 1158 mm = 0.81 arcsec/pix.
With CDK at FL = 2936 mm = 0.32 arcsec/pixel.
With CDK reducer FL = 1813 mm = 0.52 arcsec/pixel.

Conclusions.
using the principles of the Nyquist sampling Theorem.
The full focal length of 2936 mm would confirm once and for all
if you are getting less than 1 arc second seeing.
The 0.66 reducer would allow you to take images faster than your Newt now.
You could run a much larger camera sensor without vignetting.
The 10" back focus of the CDK would allow you to install adaptive optics
which would take full advantage of the seeing.
Would you break the 1 arc second barrier?
Would you get some pictures as good as CHART32 on some nights?

cheers
Allan
Don’t think it works that way Al. Look at F ratio myth. Aperture rules.

Greg
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  #19  
Old 17-08-2024, 11:54 AM
Leo.G (Leo)
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Beautiful image Mike!
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  #20  
Old 17-08-2024, 03:10 PM
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Greg,
Quote:
Don’t think it works that way Al. Look at F ratio myth. Aperture rules.

Greg

Yes I know,
if you are imaging a small galaxy then with a lower f ratio that galaxy will appear smaller but be brighter given the same time -
so it's a trade off.
I look at it as concentrating the photons into a smaller area.
You also get a wider field of view.

Plenty of thoughts here:
https://www.cloudynights.com/topic/4...-f-ratio-myth/


cheers
Allan
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