M81 is a large spiral galaxy about 11 million light years
away in Ursa Major. In the past, M81 was
gravitationally associated with its nearby neighbor, M82,
the Cigar Galaxy. M81, being much more massive, had
much more influence on M82 but did not come away unscathed
from the encounter. As a result of the near collision,
M81 has well pronounced spiral arms containing many star
forming H2 regions (seen as red spots in the arms) and an
almost linear lane of dust near the core (on the right side
of the core in this image).
Visually M81 is an easy find at magnitude 6.8 and its
compact and bright core shows up well in even small
instruments. In larger telescopes, the dust lanes and
spiral arms become evident. In wider field views, M81
and M82 are easily observed as a beautiful pair and make a
fine photographic target as well.
Here is a wider field view
of these galaxies.
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Date: 4/21/2012
Location:
4Domes Observatory
Telescope: C14 @ f/9
Mount: AP-1200
Camera: SBIG STL-6303E
Acquisition and Guiding: CCD Autopilot controlling Maxim DL
LRGB Combine Exposures: |
Luminance - 10 x 600, Bin 1x1, 1.7 hr
Red - 10x300 Seconds, Bin 2x2
Green - 10x300 Seconds, Bin 2x2
Blue - 10x300 Seconds, Bin 2x2
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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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