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Steve Mohr
Helmuth
Greg Walton
Peter Skilton
David Rolfe
David Stock
Alex Cherney
Richard Pollard

Latest Info
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Local Weather

Sun Situation


Moon Phase

CLICK HERE - Viewing Situation
at the Briars Viewing
Centre

 

M16 - TSA102S

M16 - Eagle Nebula

The Eagle Nebula (also known as Messier Object 16, M16 or NGC 6611), perhaps one of the most famous and easily recognized space objects, is a young open cluster of stars in the constellation Serpens, discovered by Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux in 1745-46. It is associated with a diffuse emission nebula, or H II region, which is catalogued as IC 4703. This region of active current star formation is about 7,000 light-years distant. The brightest star in the nebula has an apparent magnitude of 8.24, easily visible with good binoculars.

Images made in 1995 by the Hubble Space Telescope greatly improved our understanding of processes inside the nebula. The region of the Eagle Nebula known as the "Pillars of Creation" is a large region of star formation. Its small dark areas are believed to be protostars. The pillar structure of the region resembles that of another, much larger star formation region, imaged by Spitzer Space Telescope in 2005 in Cassiopeia, which is designated W5 and usually called "Mountains of Creation".
(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia)

Exposure Data

bulletInstrument: Takahashi TSA102S (TOA Reducer/ Flattener)
bulletF/stop: 8
bulletExposure:
bulletCamera: Hutech Canon EOS 40D DSLR
bulletSensitivity: ISO 1600
bulletDate: August 28, 2008
bulletExposure start:
bulletLocation: Albury, New South Wales
bulletAutoguider: None
bulletEnhancement: Registar 1.0, Adobe Photoshop CS2,
bulletNotes: Piggy backed on LX200 8" GPS, using Meade Field de-rotator

 
Up
Eta Carinae - TSA102S
Horsehead - TSA102S
Omega Centauri - ED80
Orion M42 - TSA102S
M33 - TSA102S
M45 - TSA102S
NGC2070 - TSA102S
M8 - TSA102S
M16 - TSA102S
M17 - TSA102S
M27 - TSA102S
M57 - TSA102S
Veil Nebula - TSA102S
NGC253 - TSA102S
M20 - VC200L
NGC2070 - VC200L
NGC5128 - VC200L
Rosette Nebula - TSA102S
M31, M101, M32 - TSA102S
M20 & M8 - TSA102S
M17 - VC200L

Public Viewing Nights 

Just to let everyone know, public viewing nights are held every first Friday of the month. Clear or cloudy nights the public viewing night goes ahead. Members man a number of telescopes of various sizes and types, and for those nights where the sky is cloudy, extended astronomical presentations are presented in the MPAS Viewing Centre.

So please come along and enjoy our nights sky.

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In 2011 MPAS
will host VASTROC.
For more information, click here...

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