IC1396 IC1396 - The "Elephant Trunk" Nebula
Object Description:
IC 1396 is one of the largest emission nebula complexes in the night sky, measuring some 140 x 170 arcminutes - almost three degrees in size! It resides in the constellation of Cepheus, and is actually a stellar "nursery" that hosts many young and newly-formed stars. This large nebula can be seen with the naked eye under extremely dark skies. There is a bright central star cluster, also designated IC1396, which will interfere with your ability to see the faint nebulosity while visually observing this area with a rich-field telescope. The entire nebular complex is criss-crossed by dark nebulae, which obscure the emission nebula behind them, many of which bear their own Barnard designations.
One of the most prominent parts of this object is vdb142, known as the "Elephant Trunk Nebula", and sometimes the, "Emperor Nebula", after its resemblance to the evil emperor in Star Wars.
This entire complex is thought to be some 3,000 light years from Earth.
Dates Taken:
- 9/12/2006 through 10/21/2006
Equipment Used:
- TAK FSQ
- SBIG STL-6303
- Paramount ME
- FLI PDF
- Astrodon 50mm Ha, OIII, and SII filters, with 6nm bandpass
Exposures:
- Ha: 7 hours of 30 minute subs
- OIII: 14 hours of 30 minute subs
- SII: 9 hours of 30 minute subs
...totalling 30 hours
Processing:
CCDStack:
- Calibration
- Bloom repair
- Image registration
- Initial channel combines
- Hot/cold pixel reduction
- Gentle deconvolution
- DDP
Photoshop CS2:
- Color combine
- Gradient removal
- Color adjustments
- Final bloom repair
- Noise control
- Shadow/highlight adjustments
- Contrast enhancement (Noel Carboni's Photoshop Actions)
- Contrast curves
- Sharpening
More details and versions available at http://www.flemingastrophotography.com/ic1396.html |