11/30/2024
WR-134 and the associated nebula
This image I snapped back in the summer as well. The blueish eye looking nebula is caused from the star WR-134, which is a Wolf-Rayet type star, pictured here in the center of the image. The star is so intense that it is blowing and pushing all that gas outwards. The star is just 5x the size of the sun but is over 400,000 times as luminous because it is so hot! Pretty cool!
This image I spent waaaaay too much time on, capturing as well as processing. This is about 80 hours of data half of which is RGB. The other half being Ha and OIII. The RGB data had a pretty bad artifact in it that thankfully I was able to get rid of in this edit. This nebula is extremely faint! Hope you like it! The starless version is pretty cool looking! Taken at
🚨 Nerd 🚨
RGB
Total Integrarion: 80ish hours
RGB 300s subs
Ha OIII 900s subs.
Telescope: AG Optical 14.5” iDK
Mount: Software Bisque MeII
Camera: FLI PL16803
Filters: Chroma RGB 3nmOIII
Focuser: Optec Gemini
Controlled with a Nuc computer
Capture Software: NINA
Processed in Pixinsight entirely, lightly