Image 33 of 41
Clusters and Nebulas in Norma and Ara
Clusters and Nebulas in Norma & Ara (RF135 Ra).jpg
This frames the rich region of the southern Milky Way in the small constellations of Norma (at centre) and Ara (at left and extending to the top). The bright Norma Starcloud is at bottom with the rich star cluster NGC 6067 ermbedded in it. The large red nebula at top is NGC 6188, aka RCW 108, that surrounds a loose star cluster NGC 6193. The nebula has become known as the Fighting Dragons of Ara, from its apperance in close-up images. To the right of the large nebula is the small double-lobed planetary nebula NGC 6164, though it is tiny at this image scale.
The star clusters below the nebula are NGC 6167 (left) and NGC 6134 (on the right). The stars at lower left belong to Ara. Near the dimmer yellow star Epsilon1 Arae at left are the open clusters NGC 6253 (above it) and NGC 6208 (to the right of the star).
Some small red nebulas at bottom in Norma at right do not seem to carry designations from the usual catalogues of southern nebulas such as RCW, Gum or Sharpless.
This is a stack of just 6 x 2 minute exposures with the Canon RF135mm lens at f/2 on the Canon Ra at ISO 800, tracked but not guided on the Astro-Physics AP400 mount. The lens had an URTH 82mm Night broadband filter on it.
Taken on a night devoted to shooting 135mm fields along the Milky Way, in March 2024 from the Warrumbungles Mountain Motel near Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia. Some thin cloud added the natural star glows. The threat of incoming clouds kept the exposure sequence short to allow time to shoot other fields in the area.
The star clusters below the nebula are NGC 6167 (left) and NGC 6134 (on the right). The stars at lower left belong to Ara. Near the dimmer yellow star Epsilon1 Arae at left are the open clusters NGC 6253 (above it) and NGC 6208 (to the right of the star).
Some small red nebulas at bottom in Norma at right do not seem to carry designations from the usual catalogues of southern nebulas such as RCW, Gum or Sharpless.
This is a stack of just 6 x 2 minute exposures with the Canon RF135mm lens at f/2 on the Canon Ra at ISO 800, tracked but not guided on the Astro-Physics AP400 mount. The lens had an URTH 82mm Night broadband filter on it.
Taken on a night devoted to shooting 135mm fields along the Milky Way, in March 2024 from the Warrumbungles Mountain Motel near Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia. Some thin cloud added the natural star glows. The threat of incoming clouds kept the exposure sequence short to allow time to shoot other fields in the area.
- Copyright
- © Alan Dyer/AmazingSky.com
- Image Size
- 6720x4480 / 42.4MB
- www.amazingsky.com