M33, also known as the Pinwheel Galaxy for obvious
reasons is a spiral galaxy in the constellation, Triangulum and is one of
the prominent members of our Local Group along with the Milky Way and
Andromeda galaxies. It is about 3 million light years
distant and is about 50,000 light years across; about half the size of our
Milky Way.
M33 is difficult to image because of it's relatively low
surface brightness and requires many more hours of exposure than one might
expect as a result. This image is comprised of over 23 hours of
exposures. Even the core of the galaxy is relatively faint as compared
to other galaxies in the neighborhood. However, this difficulty is
made up for by far by the very prominent H II star forming regions evident
in its spiral arms. Those areas are the pink structures visible in
this image. Some of these regions are bright enough to have been
included in Dyer's NGC catalog under their own designations separate from
the NGC 598 designation assigned to the galaxy as a whole.
Back to Messier Gallery
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Date: 10/16/2012
Location:
4Domes Observatory
Telescope: TMB130SS @ f/5.25
Mount: AP-1200
Camera: SBIG STL-6303E
Acquisition and Guiding: CCD Autopilot controlling Maxim DL
LRGB Combine Exposures: |
Luminance - 24 x 600, Bin 1x1, 4 hr
Red - 6x600 Seconds, Bin 1x1
Green - 6x600 Seconds, Bin 1x1
Blue - 6x600 Seconds, Bin 1x1
Ha - 50x1200 Seconds, Bin 1x1, 16.6 hr
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Post Processing: |
ImagesPlus: Calibration, align and
combine, digital development
Photoshop CS4: Luminance, color combine, levels, curves,
LAB color adjustment, high pass filter, sharpening
NeatImage: Noise reduction
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