Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Orion (Ori)  ·  Contains:  Great Orion Nebula  ·  Lower Sword  ·  M 42  ·  M 43  ·  Mairan's Nebula  ·  NGC 1973  ·  NGC 1975  ·  NGC 1976  ·  NGC 1977  ·  NGC 1980  ·  NGC 1981  ·  NGC 1982  ·  Orion Nebula  ·  The star 42Ori  ·  The star 45Ori  ·  The star θ1Ori  ·  The star θ2Ori  ·  The star ιOri  ·  Upper Sword  ·  the Running Man Nebula
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M42 The Orion Nebula, Sean Liang
M42 The Orion Nebula
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Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
M42 The Orion Nebula, Sean Liang
M42 The Orion Nebula
Powered byPixInsight

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description

I started this amazing hobby 8 months ago with a small telescope and a portable star tracker, and the Orion Nebula was the first target I observed. I returned to this target recently with a better imaging system recently and it didn’t disappoint. Longer exposures enabled by the new equipment revealed much finer details and disclosed the beautiful interstellar dust clouds surrounding the region.

It was not easy to acquire the data. It was Darwin's wet season, so I drove 10 hours to the inland outback and stayed a week there. The harsh conditions definitely made it challenging, but the experience was highly rewarding. There were amazing landscapes, fascinating aminals and a gorgeous, gorgeous night sky.

The core might be overexposed but I think that’s the most natural way to present this object. The Orion Nebula was so bright that it appears to be a bright star to our eyes, so I left it to its true visual appearance. 

Date: 28 Feb 2022 - Mar 2022
Location: Tennant Creek NT 0860 Australia
Ambient Temperature: 31°C

Equipment and settings:
Telescope: William Optics Zenithstar 81 F6.9 APO Doublet
Camera: Astro Modified Canon 2000D
Mount: Sky-Watcher HEQ5 ProGuide
Scope: William Optics UniGuide 50mmGuide
Camera: ZWO ASI 120MM
Filter: Nil
Accessories: ASIAir Plus
Settings: 60s ISO 1600
Integration: 500 Lights, 40 Darks, 0 Flats, 60 Bias
Total integration time: 8hr16m
Software: PixInsight, Photoshop, Topaz DeNoise

I took a timelapse during the imaging session, showing how a star tracker counters the Earth’s rotation. The whole sky rotates around the Southern Celestial Pole, and the star tracker rotates with it at the same rate. Though out of focus, one can still make out the tail of the Milky Way and the Magellanic Clouds; they were especially gorgeous.
https://youtu.be/yepmZQ-AYOo

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M42 The Orion Nebula, Sean Liang