Image 4 of 41
Panorama of the Tail of Scorpius
Tail of Scorpius Panorama (RF135 Ra).jpg
This is a panorama or mosaic of the rich region in the tail of Scorpius — from the bright star cluster Messier 7 at upper left embdded in bright Milky Way starclouds, to the large star cluster NGC 6124 amid dusty dark lanes at lower right.
At bottom is the False Comet, as it looks comet-like to the naked eye. It is made of the small bright star cluster NGC 6231, along with the larger cluster Collinder 316, and the magenta emission nebula IC 4628.
At top is the very red nebula NGC 6357 and below it NGC 6334, aka the Cat's Paw Nebula. The very tiny (on this scale) red Bug Nebula, NGC 6302, is at centre.
The pair of stars left of centre are Shaula and Lesath which make up the "Stingers" of the Scorpion tail. The tight double right of centre is made of Mu1 and Mu2 Scorpii.
This is a stitch of 3 segments: each a stack of 6 (for the left and right segments) or 10 (for the main middle segment) x 2 minute exposures with the Canon RF135mm lens at f/2 on the Canon Ra at ISO 800. It was on the Astro-Physics AP400 mount. The lens had an 82mm URTH Night broadband filter on it. Taken on the morning of March 14, 2024 from the Warrumbungles Mountain Motel near Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia during the OzSky star party.
At bottom is the False Comet, as it looks comet-like to the naked eye. It is made of the small bright star cluster NGC 6231, along with the larger cluster Collinder 316, and the magenta emission nebula IC 4628.
At top is the very red nebula NGC 6357 and below it NGC 6334, aka the Cat's Paw Nebula. The very tiny (on this scale) red Bug Nebula, NGC 6302, is at centre.
The pair of stars left of centre are Shaula and Lesath which make up the "Stingers" of the Scorpion tail. The tight double right of centre is made of Mu1 and Mu2 Scorpii.
This is a stitch of 3 segments: each a stack of 6 (for the left and right segments) or 10 (for the main middle segment) x 2 minute exposures with the Canon RF135mm lens at f/2 on the Canon Ra at ISO 800. It was on the Astro-Physics AP400 mount. The lens had an 82mm URTH Night broadband filter on it. Taken on the morning of March 14, 2024 from the Warrumbungles Mountain Motel near Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia during the OzSky star party.
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- © Alan Dyer/AmazingSky.com
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