NIGHT OVER ONTARIO
Pictures have appeared on the cover and inside editions of SkyNews magazine and in Sky & Telescope and Astronomy magazine, and as NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day.
“ Had I the heavens' embroidered cloths,
Enwrought with golden and silver light,
The blue and the dim and the dark cloths
Of night and light and the half light,”
W.B.Yeats
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M78 Reflection nebula. 16 hours of exposure taken by Lynn Hilborn, WhistleStop Obs, Grafton, Ontario. TEC 140 @f7 and FLI ML8300 camera on Takahashi NJP mount. LRGB each 160m and Ha 300m all binned 1x1. Imaged Nov 2011 thru Jan 2012. Image appears in Sky and Telescope magazine May 2012 and back cover Royal Astronomical Society of Canada magazine Journal, April 2012.
An eerie blue glow and ominous columns of dark dust highlight M78 and other bright reflection nebula in the constellation of Orion. The dark filamentary dust not only absorbs light, but also reflects the light of several bright blue stars that formed recently in the nebula. Of the two reflection nebulas pictured above, the more famous nebula is M78, the upper , while NGC 2071 can be seen below. The same type of scattering that colors the daytime sky further enhances the blue color. M78 is about five light-years across and visible through a small telescope. M78 appears above only as it was 1600 years ago, however, because that is how long it takes light to go from there to here. M78 belongs to the larger Orion Molecular Cloud Complex that contains the Great Nebula in Orion and the Horsehead Nebula. Text, with thanks, from APOD see
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap080318.html
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