M1 - Crab nebula
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A planetary nebula is a kind of emission nebula consisting of an expanding glowing shell of ionized gas ejected from old red giant stars late in their lives. The word 'nebula' is Latin for mist or cloud and the term 'planetary nebula' is a misnomer that originated in the 1780s with astronomer William Herschel because when viewed through his telescope, these objects appeared to him to be newly forming planetary systems. Herschel's name for these objects was adopted by astronomers and has not been changed. They are a relatively short-lived phenomenon, lasting a few tens of thousands of years, compared to a typical stellar lifetime of several billion years. ― source and more information wikipedia
Date: 2013-10-11
Location: Ekerö, Sweden
Temperature: 7 °C
Telescope: Skywatcher Equinox 80 APO
Camera: Canon 500D
ISO: 1600
Mount: Meade fork-mount
Exposure time: 93 X 45 sec
Reducer/flattener: William-Optics 0.8X reducer/flattener (P-FLAT-F6)
Filter: Astronomik CLS
Other info: Autoguided with 50mm scope and QHY5-II ontop of a Meade 12inch LX200 GPS.
Processing: Stacked and darks-subtracted in DeepSkyStacker. Processed in Photoshop CS6.