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Eastern Veil Nebula
About 7,000 years ago people on Earth would have seen a star in the Milky Way explode. I have reprocessed some data I collected a year ago: not the greatest image, but capturing the essence of these ionised wisps of hydrogen, oxygen and sulfur gas that are part of the remnants that were blasted off. The Eastern Veil Nebula, in Cygnus.
About 6.56 hours of 20” exposures, imaged from Colchester, England, in June 2022 on a modified Nikon D750 DSLR, Sky-Watcher Explorer 150p, EQ5 Pro, via Stellarmate in Kstars/Ekos. Stacked in AstroPixelProcessor, cropped and adjusted in Photoshop and Lightroom.
© Gary Eason gary@easonmedia.com to license
Picture keywords: Cygnus, Cygnus Loop, Eastern Veil, IC 1340, Network Nebula, NGC 6992, NGC 6995, supernova remnants
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