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SN2023ixf in M101 20240422
M101, the Pinwheel Galaxy, recalling the emergence last May of a supernova - SN2023ixf - in one of its spiral arms. A very helpful fellow member of the British Astronomical Association has pointed out that it is still visible, albeit now glowing red and at magnitude 17.5 V. This involved 20" exposures at Gain 300/Offset 10, gathered in the garden in Colchester UK on a ZWO ASI585MC camera with Baader Mk III MPCC coma corrector and ZWO UV/IR cut filter, on a Sky-Watcher Explorer 150p and EQ5 Pro mount, via Stellarmate Plus in Kstars/Ekos. Stacked in AstroPixelProcessor, cropped and adjusted in Lightroom, tweaked in Photoshop with Topaz DeNoise AI.
© Gary Eason gary@easonmedia.com to license
Picture keywords: back garden astrophotography, deep sky object, M101, Messier 101, Pinwheel Galaxy, spiral galaxy, Ursa Major
Published in: Night sky
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