Time Travel Research Center © 2005 Cetin BAL - GSM: +90 05366063183 - Turkey
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About this Image: |
During the spring months,
the night skies turn to a galactic festival. A veritable parade of
galaxies from Ursa Major to Virgo stretches across the northern
hemisphere sky. One of the most popular "clusters" of galaxies is in
the constellation Virgo, the heart of which is known as the "Markarian's
Chain" of galaxies. The chain, named after an Armenian astronomer in
the 1970s, consists of giant elliptical galaxies M84 and M86 on the
right side and stretches up to the spiral galaxy M88 near the top. Other
major galaxies in the image include the huge elliptical M87 at bottom;
M89 and M90 at bottom left; and M91 and NGC 4571 at upper left. Of note
is the galactic jet streaming out from M89.
The Virgo cluster consists
of over 2000 known galaxies, which collectively impact our own Local
Galaxy Group. The image above, shows no fewer than a 100 of these
galaxies, or perhaps more. How many can you count?
For a star chart showing the
region, click
<here>.
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Location:
Texas Star Party, 2006,
near Ft. Davis, TX
Date: April 29, 2006
Seeing:
3/10
Transparency: 7/10
Scope/Mount: Tak FSQ-106 and Paramount ME
Camera: SBIG STL-11000 astro CCD camera
Exposure Info: LRGB image - 100:20:15:20 minutes (10 minute
subexposures unbinned for luminance; 5 minute subexposure binned for RGB)
Processing
Information:
Acquistion in CCDSoft.
Calibration, Registration, DDP, and color combine in CCDStack. Color balance,
levels/curves, sharpening, and noise removal (Astronomy Tools/Pro Digital
Software) in Photoshop CS.
Exposure
Notes: Dark TSP skies, but not quite as transparent as I've seen
it there. Seeing around 3 to 3.5 arc seconds...good enough for wide field
refractors but not for long focal length instruments.
Previous Attempts:
The Markarian Chain
Three prominent
Messier galaxies can be seen in this shot, M84, M86, and M87, all of which
are massive, elliptical galaxies. The rest of the galaxies are part of a
cluster of galaxies in Virgo. Most impressive is the chain of galaxies
known as Markarian's chain. The chain begins at M84, at the bottom of this
image, and curving upwards to the right. How many galaxies are here? Perhaps
hundreds and thousands. No fewer than thirty are shown in this image. If
it's fuzzy, it's a galaxy!
Location:
Texas Star Party 2004 near Fort Davis, Texas
Seeing:
8/10
Transparency:
9/10
Date and Time:
May 16, 2003
Equipment:
Tak FSQ-106 @ f/5 on Tak NJP mount
Camera: SBIG STL-6303E NABG with integrated filter wheel
Exposure Info: Grayscale, clear luminance, 6 x 10 minutes
Processing Information:
Dark frame calibration, deblooming, registration and Sigma combine in MaxIm
DL 4. Digital development in MaxIm DL 4. Levels and curves in Photoshop CS.
Astronomi
Galaxy Resimler
Astrophotography Yıldız Resimler
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