Friday, October 25, 2013
Messiers 31, 32 and 110
The main event in this photo is the gorgeous Andromeda Galaxy (M31). There are observations of this galaxy dated to 905 AD by Persian Astronomers. In a dark sky, it is a naked-eye object, though not with this kind of detail. It spans a whopping 160,000 light years across and contains an estimated 700,000,000,000 solar masses. It's hard to even comprehend the number of stars and worlds we are looking at in this one picture. Complete humbling. It is the closest galaxy to our own Milky way and it was Edwin Hubble who first figured out a reasonably accurate distance and that it wasn't part of the Milky Way.
The other two objects in the photo are M32 (below) and M110 (above). M32 and M110 are physical companions of Andromeda; locked in a gravity-driven cosmic dance. Compared directly to Andromeda, they may not look like much, but both are galaxies in their own right.
Photo Details
Messiers 31, 32 and 110
October 23, 2013
Orion 8" Astrograph on VX Mount
Nikon D3100 Camera
58 sub frames at 30"/frame
Total Exposure Time = 29 minutes
Image Stacking in Deep Sky Tracker
Image Processing in Fitswork
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Wow did you really take this photo in our front yard?? You are AWESOME!
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