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M016 Eagle Nebula

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The Eagle Nebulae (M16) is a young open cluster of stars, gas and dust in the constellation Serpens, discovered by Jean-Philippe de Chéseaux in 1745–46. Note the dark silhouette near the center of the nebula, an area made famous as the "Pillars of Creation" imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope. The nebula contains several active star-forming gas and dust regions. This image taken with the Triad Ultra Quad Narrow-Band filter, which permitted shooting from with light-polluted suburbia.
Processed in PixInsight and Topaz Denoise.
Exposure 6@300 sec + 1@600 sec + 12@900 sec (8.25 hours)
ISO 800
Camera Nikon Z7 [8856 x 5504]
Optics Skywatcher Esprit 120mm Refractor, 840 mm focal length
Filter Radian Triad Ultra Quad-Band Narrowband Filter
Guiding Phd2 using a ZWO 224MC on an Orion 60x240mm Guide scope
Controller Images taken using Kstars on an Odroid-N2 (Raspberry Pi clone)
Location Lower Sackville, Nova Scotia.
Date 2020-06-16 - 2020-09-05
PixInsight Processing
WeightedBatchPreprocessing Script
Dynamic Crop
Automatic Background Extractor
MultiscaleLinearTransform
HistogramTransform
CurvesTransformation
LocalHistogramEquilization
Further tweaking for noise reduction in Topaz DeNoise AI


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