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SKY & TELESCOPE
Sky & Telescope is part of AAS Sky
Publishing, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the American Astronomical
Society. Sky & Telescope, Night Sky, and skyandtelescope.org are registered
trademarks of AAS Sky Publishing LLC. Sky & Telescope maintains a strict
policy of editorial independence from the AAS and its research publications in
reporting developments in astronomy to readers.
SKY & TELESCOPE
Sky & Telescope, American Astronomical
Society'nin tamamen sahip olduğu bir yan kuruluş olan AAS Sky Publishing,
LLC'nin bir parçasıdır. Sky & Telescope, Night Sky ve skyandtelescope.org,
AAS Sky Publishing LLC'nin tescilli ticari markalarıdır. Sky & Telescope,
okuyuculara astronomi alanındaki gelişmeleri bildirirken AAS ve araştırma yayınlarından
sıkı bir editoryal bağımsızlık politikası sürdürmektedir.
THE WHİRLPOOL GALAXY; M51
The Whirlpool Galaxy Galaxy (M51), is an interacting grand-design spiral
galaxy in the constellation Canes
Venatici. It is estimated to be 23 million light-years away.
The Whirlpool Galaxy is located at the coordinates RA 13h 29m
53s | Dec +47° 11′ 43″. It can be spotted in a pair of binoculars by moving from the bright star Alkaid
in Ursa Major, towards Cor Caroli in Canes Venatici.
Messier 51 is a northern hemisphere deep-sky object that is
bright enough to observe in amateur telescopes. It is a popular choice for
amateur astrophotographers during galaxy
season.
For more astrophotography and observing inspiration, be sure to
have a look at my article describing the brightest
galaxies in the night sky.
THE
WHİRLPOOL GALAXY CAPTURED USİNG
A
CAMERA AND TELESCOPE.
The Whirlpool Galaxy is estimated to
be about 400-million years old. It was observed and cataloged by famous
astronomer Charles Messier in 1773 as Messier 51 (M51). It eventually earned
the nickname “The Whirlpool” because it resembles a vortex in the water.
M51’s companion galaxy (NGC 5195) is clearly visible in photographs,
and even detectable through the telescope eyepiece (with enough aperture). The
Whirlpool has a supermassive black hole at its heart, thanks to the merging of M51 with its
neighboring galaxy, NGC 5195.
The Whirlpool Galaxy’s fascinating
structure gives astronomers a better understanding of how galaxies interact
with each other and how stars form within them. This article by NASA discusses how the Chandra X-ray
Observatory discovered a black hole “burping” at the center of the Whirlpool’s
companion galaxy.
The image shown above was captured
using a monochrome CCD camera and, and a large refractor telescope (Sky-Watcher Esprit 150) from my backyard. Contrast my modest take on this
deep-object with Hubble’s
version taken in January 2005.
The Whirlpool Galaxy taken by the Advanced Camera
for Surveys aboard the Hubble Space Telescope.
The Whirlpool Galaxy has been highly
studied and observed by professional astronomers for many years. M51 was originally thought to be “a spiral nebula” until
Edwin Hubble was able to identify Cepheid
variable stars in some of these spiral nebulae.
This provided evidence that these
stars were so far away that they must be entirely separate galaxies.
Name: The Whirlpool Galaxy
Cataloged: Messier
51, NGC 5194
Constellation: Canes
Venatici
Distance to Earth: About
23 million light-years
Radius: 30,000
light-years
Stars: 100 billion
Apparent size (V): 11′.2 × 6′.9
The Whirlpool Galaxy is an
extremely satisfying astrophotography target due to its high surface brightness
and impressively detailed spiral arm structure. As seen in this APOD
image, there is also a subtle glow
around the galaxy that is best enjoyed through long-exposure photography.
Through a telescope eyepiece,
M51 is rather faint and fuzzy, although some of its structure can be observed
under dark, moonless skies with enough aperture. The star chart below shows the
location of the Whirlpool Galaxy in the night sky.
The location of the
Whirlpool Galaxy. Stellarium.
My latest image of the Whirlpool
Galaxy was captured from my Bortle
Scale Class 6/7 backyard in Ontario, Canada in March/April 2020. I
collected data in RGB color filters using a monochrome camera, along with key
luminance details as well.
The Starlight Xpress SX-42 camera (Trius 694) is an incredible astrophotography camera, and the first and only true CCD camera I’ve ever used. Building this image be shooting multiple 5-minute exposures through LRGB filters was a labor of love, and I am very happy with the results.
The Whirlpool Galaxy in LRGB (click for larger
version)
This image uses a grand total
of 6 hours of integrated exposure time. Much more luminance data was collected
than any of the color filters, which seems to have been a good technique for
this broadband galaxy target. Here is a breakdown of the exact exposure times
used to create this image:
36 x 300-seconds Lum
9 x 300-seconds Red
12 x 300-seconds Green
15 x 300-seconds Blue
The integrated data through
each filter was registered and stacked in DeepSkyStacker (see my DeepSkyStacker
tutorial). The black and white images
were then placed into RGB color channels in Photoshop, and processed
extensively to create the image of M51 shown above.
To learn about how I process my
deep-sky astrophotography images in Adobe Photoshop, be sure to check out
my premium image processing guide. I used a third-party plugin called Topaz Labs Denoise AI to help smooth out the subtle areas of color noise in the final
image.
You can also view the complete
astrophotography details of this image on AstroBin.
Here is an image of the telescope used for the photo above. The Sky-Watcher Esprit 150 has a focal length
of 1050mm at F/7.
THE SKY-WATCHER ESPRİT 150 APO REFRACTOR
I have been pointing my telescope
towards Messier 51 for nearly 10 years. I have made steady progress over time,
and the images keep getting better as I hone my image acquisition and
processing skills.
Here is an older photo of M51
captured using my 8″ Orion F/4 Newtonian Astrograph Telescope. At this focal
length (800mm) you can see much more of the surrounding space in Canes Venatici.
The Whirlpool Galaxy photographed on May 18, 2014.
The image above was captured using
my Orion 8″ F/4 Astrograph
Newtonian telescope on a Sky-Watcher HEQ5 computerized telescope
mount. A Canon EOS Rebel DSLR camera was attached to the telescope to capture
30 x 3-minute exposures at ISO 1600.
Girdap Gökadası, M51, 31 milyon ışık yılı uzaklıkta bulunan bir sarmal gökadadır.
Zarif, kıvrımlı kollar, pembe yıldız oluşum bölgeleri ve parlak mavi yıldız
kümeleri şeritleri gibi tipik bir sarmal gökadanın özelliklerini vurgular.
Girdap Gökadası, Av Köpekleri takımyıldızı bölgesinde yaklaşık
olarak 23 milyon ışık yılı uzaklıkta bulunan etkileşim hâlindeki büyük tasarım
çubuksuz sarmal gökadadır. Gökyüzünün en ünlü sarmal gökadalarından biridir.
Yıldızlar: 100 milyar
Yaşı: 400.300.000 yaşında
Mutlak büyüklük: 8,4
Koordinatlar: SA 13s 29d 53sn | Yük. +47° 11′ 43″
Yarıçap: 30.000 ışık yılı
Dünyaya uzaklığı: 31.000.000 ışık yılı
,
#www.medyagunebakis.com, #Toplumsalmuhalefet,
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