Capturing a new supernova in another galaxy: NGC7331 and SN2025rbs

Usually I don’t image on work nights so I get enough sleep.

However, the new telescope cloud curse has been strong, and I’ve only had a few clear nights since I bought my new William Optics Pleiades 111 telescope “Blue” earlier this year.  So when it was finally clear on Tuesday, I couldn’t resist taking my new telescope outside.  I continued to collect data on M101, but I had learned through a Facebook post that there was a new supernova in the galaxy NGC7331.  So after M101 set, I spent the rest of the night imaging NGC7331.

NGC7331 is an unbarred spiral galaxy.  It’s located approximately 47 million light years away, and it has an apparent size of 10.47 arcminutes, making it about 144 thousand light years across.  One paper on this galaxy argues that its central bulge rotates in the opposite direction of its outer disk – weird!  Another argues that the stars in the central bulge are old – 13 billion years old, while the stars in the disk are young – possibly 0.2 billion years old.  (This may not be unusual; our own galaxy is still making stars in its outer arms right now, which I also think is really cool.)  

Supernova 2025rbs is a Type 1A supernova, which occurs when a white dwarf star collects material from a companion star, almost reaches the Chandrasekar mass, starts fusing carbon, experiences a runaway reaction, and explodes, releasing an enormous, but predictable, amount of energy.  Type 1A supernovas can be used as standard candles to measure the distance to the supernova (and in cases like SN2025rbs the distance to the home galaxy) because the energy they release and thus their brightness is predictable.  SN2025rbs was discovered by the Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTO) on July 14, 2025.

You can clearly see SN2025rbs as a bright spot near the galaxy center.  In fact, it appears to outshine the galaxy center, which I find amazing.  

When I imaged this, I deliberately used short capture times (15 seconds) so that the bright supernova would not “blow out” and clip to pure white or cause “pixel bloom” where the light overwhelms the pixel capturing it and so bleeds into the nearby pixels.  

I spent a fair bit of time thinking about how this image “should” be processed.  On the one hand, I wanted to preserve the relative amount of light and color for the supernova relative to both the star field and NGC7331, its host galaxy.  On the other hand, astroimages are inherently low-light and high dynamic range, which means that the data has to be non-linearly stretched to show both the relatively bright supernova and stars and the relatively dim galaxy.  

My standard PinInsight processing flow includes using BlurXTerminator (BXT) to sharpen the stars and non-stellar objects, NoiseXTerminator (NXT) to remove noise, and then StarXTerminator (SXT) to separate the stars from the non-stellar objects so they can be stretched separately.

I considered whether I should skip the BXT processing step.  BXT sharpens the stars and makes them smaller, and it did the same to the supernova but not the NGC7331 galactic core.  The BXT documentation says, “BlurXTerminator is trained to conserve flux, the total amount of light associated with a feature such as a star. When a blurred star is made less blurry, the light from some number of pixels is concentrated into a smaller number of pixels. Those pixels must get brighter for the total amount of flux to be the same.”  Based on that statement, I think since BXT preserves the amount of light in each star, it also preserves the relative amount of light between the stars and between the stars and the supernova (assuming none of them are clipped because they exceed the max brightness level, which did not happen in this case).  Further, since stars (and supernovae) are point sources of light and with perfect seeing and optics would only be “seen” in one pixel, using BXT to sharpen the stars and the supernova should be making them more like their “true” amount of light relative to the galaxy as well.  So I left the BXT step in my processing flow.

I also considered whether I should skip the SXT step and stretch the stars, supernova, and galaxies together or use SXT and stretch them separately.  Either way, there is no longer a linear relationship between the brightness of the objects.  If I processed this as a single image, the brightness ordering – what is brighter than what – would be maintained.  If I used SXT so I could stretch the galaxies separately, I could end up making the galaxy core brighter than the supernova, even though it was not in the raw data.  On the other hand, I could show more detail in the galaxy if I processed it separately.  I ended up deciding that, in this case, what was most important to me was to maintain the brightness order and show that the supernova was brighter than the galactic core.  So I processed it as a single image.

My final PixInsight processing flow was:

  • WBPP to calibrate, normalize, and integrate three channels of RGB data
  • ChannelCombination to combine the RGB channels into a single image
  • DBE to remove the excess blue in the background
  • SPCC to calibrate the color
  • BXT to sharpen the stars and the galaxy
  • NXT to to remove some noise since this is only a few hours worth of data from my Bortle 7-8 light polluted skies
  • Histogram Transformation to stretch the image

At some point, I’d like to collect more data on this galaxy and make a nicer picture of it.  But the clouds are back now.  The curse continues …   

Camera geek info:

  • William Optics Pleiades 111 telescope
  • ZWO 2” Electronic Filter Wheel
  • Antila RGB filters
  • Blue Fireball 360° Camera Angle Adjuster/Rotator
  • ZWO ASI183MM-Pro-Mono camera
  • William Optics Uniguide 32MM F/3.75
  • ZWO ASI220MM-mini
  • ZWO ASiair Plus
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Friendswood, Texas Bortle 7-8 suburban skies

Frames:

  • Lights
    • 248 15 second Gain 150 Red lights  (62 minutes)
    • 182 15 second Gain 150 Green lights (45.5 minutes)
    • 168 15 second Gain 150 Blue lights (42 minutes)
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Red flats
    • 30 0.1 second Gain 150 Green flats
    • 30 0.1 second Gain 150 Blue flats
  • Darks, Flat darks from library

M101: First Light with William Optics Pleiades 111 Telescope “Blue”

It’s a well-known astrophotography curse that buying new equipment means weeks, if not months, worth of cloudy skies.  My new telescope, a William Optics Pleiades 111, a 11.1 cm/4.37 inch diameter refractor that I’ve nicknamed “Blue”, was no exception.  It took about a month after I got the telescope (and the additional two counter weights I needed to balance it) for the skies to at least somewhat clear.  I got everything set up, just to watch the clouds roll in.  Happily, they then rolled back out.  And then rolled back in.  And out.

I ended up with enough data to make a first light picture, but I’ll need to collect more data for a final image.

I had contemplated what to image for first light.  Since the telescope name is Pleiades, the Pleiades would have been a good target, except they’re currently barely above the horizon at sunset.  My favorite nebula, the Orion nebula, would have been a good target, except it’s also currently barely above the horizon at sunset.  It’s “galaxy season,” so I decided to image a galaxy.  I’ve imaged M101 before because it hosted a supernova in 2023, so it gave me a good point of comparison.  

The comparison isn’t entirely a fair one.  On the one hand, this is an entirely new setup, with a much larger diameter telescope, an astro camera instead of a consumer camera, and a guide scope and guide camera to better control the tracking mount.  Additionally, I’ve picked up a lot of processing skill in the last two years, such as using shorter images for the stars so they don’t “bloat.”  On the other hand, this was 3.4 hours of galaxy data from my Bortle 7-8 light polluted driveway instead of 10.6 hours from the Bortle 2-3 dark skies of Dell City.

Because of the light pollution and limited imaging time, there is a lot more background noise in the new image.  But the stars are enormously improved from the old image.  And there is more detail in the new image.  I can’t wait to see how an image with more data turns out!

Once the clouds roll away again ….

Camera geek info May 9, 2025 (new image):

  • William Optics Pleiades 111 telescope
  • ZWO 2” Electronic Filter Wheel
  • Antila RGB filters
  • Blue Fireball 360° Camera Angle Adjuster/Rotator
  • ZWO ASI183MM-Pro-Mono camera
  • William Optics Uniguide 32MM F/3.75
  • ZWO ASI220MM-mini
  • ZWO ASiair Plus
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Friendswood, Texas Bortle 7-8 suburban skies

Frames (new image):

  • May 9, 2025
    • 32 30 second Gain 150 Red lights for stars
    • 24 30 second Gain 150 Green lights for stars
    • 22 30 second Gain 150 Blue lights for stars
    • 53 60 second Gain 150 Red lights for galaxy
    • 66 60 second Gain 150 Green lights for galaxy
    • 86 60 second Gain 150 Blue lights for galaxy
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Red flats
    • 30 0.1 second Gain 150 Green flats
    • 30 0.1 second Gain 150 Blue flats
  • Darks, Flat darks from library

Camera geek info (old image):

  • William Optics Zenith Star 73 III APO telescope
  • William Optics Flat 73A
  • Canon EOS 60D in manual mode, 2 minute exposure, ISO 1600 and ISO 2000, custom white balance 3500K
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Dell City, Texas Bortle 2-3 dark skies

Frames (old image):

  • June 10, 2023
    • Run 1 1600 ISO
      • 99 2 minute lights
      • 31 0.01 second flats
      • 20 0.01 second flat darks
    • Run 2 1600 ISO
      • 39 2 minute lights
      • 31 0.02 second flats
      • 30 0.02 second flat darks
      • 71 2 minute darks
  • June 11, 2023 2000 ISO
    • 151 2 minute lights
    • 31 0.02 second flats
    • 20 0.02 second flat darks
    • 31 2 minute darks
  • June 12, 2023 2000 ISO
    • 30 2 minute lights
    • 31 0.02 second flats
    • 30 0.02 second flat darks
    • 32 2 minute darks

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • BlurXterminator
  • NoiseXterminator
  • StarXTerminator
  • Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch

Spectacular Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan ATLAS Image Collection

Last fall, the spectacular Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan ATLAS looped around the sun and put on a show in the early evening sky.  I had a great time having a comet tailgate party with friends, seeking it naked eye, and capturing it with my camera and an 85 mm lens.  

As the days passed and the comet travelled away from the sun, it grew dimmer and its tail grew shorter, and I switched over to using my telescope.  In the left-most of the lower images, you can see some interesting structure in the comet’s tail.  

Processing comets is a challenge because the comet moves relative to the stars and so has to be aligned and processed separately.  They take longer to process than other Deep Space Objects, and I only just finished processing all my images.  I thought it would be fun to collect them all together and make the picture above.

Imaging this visitor from the outer solar system was a great treat.  I’m looking forward to the next one.

Sh2-274 Abell 21 Medusa Nebula

Sh2-274 or Abell 21 or the Medusa Nebula is a planetary nebula – the gases expelled from a red giant star before it becomes a white dwarf, lit up by that star.  It’s located in the Milky Way, approximately 1930 light years away, and it has an apparent size of 10.25 arcminutes, making it 5.75 light years across.  Given the amount of time it would take to reach that size, it is considered to be an “ancient” planetary nebula.  

I find these small nebulae beautiful and fascinating. Each has its own unique structure.  This one has a Ha rim and an Oiii interior and has filaments (the filaments are probably the source of its nickname, the Medusa nebula).

In this image, the stars came from images using red-green-blue filters, and the nebula came from images using Hydrogen alpha (mapped to red) and Oxygen iii (mapped to blue) filters.  The nebula was processed separately from the stars to maximally enhance it.

I had hoped to get enough data on this one the last time we enjoyed the dark skies in Dell City, Texas, but there were a lot of high clouds that limited the amount of data I collected there.  So I collected more data from my driveway at home until I had almost 7 hours of Ha data and 6.7 hours of Oiii data.  

Camera geek info – Narrowband:

  • William Optics Zenith Star 73 III APO telescope
  • William Optics Flat 73A
  • ZWO 2” Electronic Filter Wheel
  • Antila HO and RGB filters
  • ZWO ASI183MM-Pro-Mono camera
  • ZWO ASiair Plus
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Friendswood, Texas Bortle 7-8 suburban skies
  • Dell City, Texas Bortle 2-3 dark skies

Frames:

  • January 24, 2025
    • 14 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 0.5 second Gain 150 Ha flats
  • February 15, 2025
    • 100 30 second Gain 150 Red lights
    • 30 0.05 second Gain 150 Red flats
    • 98 30 second Gain 150 Green lights
    • 30 0.02 second Gain 150 Green flats
    • 60 30 second Gain 150 Blue lights
    • 30 0.02 second Gain 150 Blue flats
  • February 20, 2025
    • 19 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 0.5 second Gain 150 Ha flats
    • 5 60 second Gain 150 Oiii lights
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Oiii flats
  • February 21, 2025
    • 68 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 0.5 second Gain 150 Ha flats
    • 30 60 second Gain 150 Oiii lights
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Oiii flats
  • February 22, 2025
    • 48 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 0.5 second Gain 150 Ha flats
    • 32 60 second Gain 150 Oiii lights
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Oiii flats
  • April 7, 2025
    • 131 60 second Gain 150 Oiii lights
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Oiii flats
  • April 8, 2025
    • 130 60 second Gain 150 Oiii lights
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Oiii flats
  • April 10, 2025
    • 72 60 second Gain 150 Oiii lights
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Oiii flats
  • April 11, 2025
    • 133 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 0.5 second Gain 150 Ha flats
  • April 12, 2025
    • 137 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 0.5 second Gain 150 Ha flats
  • 30 Flat Darks from library
  • 30 Darks from library

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • BlurXterminator
  • NoiseXterminator
  • StarXTerminator
  • NBColourMapper
  • Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch

Capturing Comet C/2025 F2 SWAN

In late March 2025, a new comet, C/2025 F2, was found in imagery from the Solar Wind Anisotropies (SWAN) camera on the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). 

Orbit images Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech.

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) has a great orbital dynamics viewer where you can see its orbit relative to the planets.  It’s quite fun to play with!  C/2025 F2’s orbit is very parabolic and nearly 90 degrees out of the ecliptic plane.  It is coming in from north of the ecliptic plane, will loop around the sun near Mercury’s orbit on May 1, 2025, and then head back out to the outer solar system south of the ecliptic plane.  So it’s visible from the Northern Hemisphere in the early morning now, but as it approaches the sun, it will get more and more difficult to spot, and it will be more visible from the Southern Hemisphere on its outgoing trajectory.

“Now” was the best time to see it from the Northern Hemisphere, and we have had a nice string of days with clear skies, so last weekend, it was time to go comet hunting!  

I used the JPL Horizons System to predict the comet location and motion so that I knew where to point my telescope and I knew how long the images could be without “smearing” the comet – 15 seconds for my telescope and camera combo.

I loaded up my gear, and my husband and I drove to our favorite early morning comet viewing site in Bacliff, Texas.  By the time I had everything set up, the comet was above the horizon.  My preprogrammed location contained a small, fuzzy object which looked like a comet on the first try!  I was really delighted that everything worked on the first try; this has not always been the case in the past.  I spent some (probably too much) time trying to get it positioned better in the frame and started imaging.  It was brighter in green than in red and blue which, with its fuzziness, confirmed to me that it was likely a comet.  I couldn’t see a tail in my single images.

I set up my regular camera to see if I could get some wider field images.  Given what I ended up with in the telescope images, I do not think the comet will be visible in the wider field images.

Both my husband and I tried to find the comet with binoculars, with no luck at all.  

We finished the morning with a lovely sunrise and breakfast.

Processing comets is still a big challenge for me, with more steps than processing a nebula.  I mostly follow the excellent process outlined by Adam Block in his Comet Academy.  Blinking through my frames, I could see the comet moving across the sky, another sure indicator that I had captured the right object!  After aligning, integrating, and stretching the comet images, I could see a faint tail that stretched all the way across the field of view (about 2 degrees with this telescope and camera combination), but the background noise was brighter than it was.  I tried several methods to make the tail visible, and the one that worked the best was to “murder the background” as Adam says in one of his videos.

I’m probably not going to get another chance to capture this one, but I enjoyed getting to see it at least once.  Has anyone else tried to go out and capture this one?

Camera geek info:

  • William Optics Zenith Star 73 III APO telescope
  • William Optics Flat 73A
  • ZWO 2” Electronic Filter Wheel
  • Antila RGB filters
  • ZWO ASI183MM-Pro-Mono camera
  • William Optics Uniguide 32MM F/3.75
  • ZWO ASI220MM-mini
  • ZWO ASiair Plus
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Bacliff, Texas Bortle 6 suburban skies

Frames:

  • April 12, 2025
    • 47 15 second Gain 150 Green lights
    • 30 0.02 second Gain 150 Green flats
    • 45 15 second Gain 150 Blue lights
    • 30 0.02 second Gain 150 Blue flats
    • 50 15 second Gain 150 Red lights
    • 30 0.05 second Gain 150 Red flats
  • 30 Flat Darks from library
  • 30 Darks 

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • BlurXterminator
  • NoiseXterminator
  • StarXTerminator
  • Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch

M46, two Planetary Nebulas, and the Joy of Discovery

Messier 46, also numbered New General Catalogue (NGC) 2437, is an open cluster, a cluster of about 500 stars that formed from the same molecular cloud and are similar in age, estimated to be 251.2 million years old.  M46 is located in the Milky Way, approximately 4930 light years away, and it has an apparent size of 25.3 arcmin, so it is approximately 36 light years across.  

I chose to photograph this open cluster not only because it is a Messier object I haven’t imaged yet but because there is a planetary nebula in front of it, so I was getting to image two objects at the same time. 

But when I processed the image and removed the stars, I got a surprise.  There wasn’t just one planetary nebula – there were two!  I was delighted and felt the joy of discovery.  I hadn’t known there was a second planetary nebula there, and yet there it was!  I immediately used PixInsight to annotate the image to see if the small planetary nebula was known, and of course it had already been discovered.  But it was still super fun to find something unexpected in my image.

The planetary nebula I had been intending to image, NGC 2438 or PK 231+04.2, is located in the Milky Way, approximately 1377 light years away, and it has an apparent size of 1.173 arc min, so it is approximately 0.5 light years across.  Because it had a different relative motion relative to us than M46, it is not considered to be part of the open cluster.  Before I learned that, I had thought it would be cool if it were part of the cluster and that possibly (since cluster stars are generally of similar age) multiple stars in the cluster could generate visible planetary nebula at the same time.  Wouldn’t that be a sight to see?

My surprise planetary nebula, Minkowski M1-18 or PK231+0.41, is located in the Milky way, approximately 14500 light years away, and it has an apparent size of 0.507 arcminutes, so it is approximately 2.1 light years across.  So further away and larger than NGC2438.

In this image, the stars came from images using red-green-blue filters, and the two nebulas came from images using Hydrogen alpha (mapped to red) and Oxygen iii (mapped to turquoise) filters.  The two nebulas were processed separately to maximally enhance each, which means that they are more equal in brightness in the image than they are in reality (M1-18 is much dimmer).

Have you felt the joy of discovery lately?

Camera geek info – Narrowband:

  • Williams Optics Zenith Star 73 III APO telescope
  • Williams Optics Flat 73A
  • ZWO 2” Electronic Filter Wheel
  • Antila SHO and RGB filters
  • ZWO ASI183MM-Pro-Mono camera
  • ZWO ASiair Plus
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Friendswood, Texas Bortle 7-8 suburban skies

Frames:

  • November 23, 2024
    • 135 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 1 second Gain 150 Ha flats
  • December 19, 2024
    • 97 60 second Gain 150 Oiii lights
    • 30 0.5 second Gain 150 Oiii flats
  • December 20, 2024
    • 89 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 1 second Gain 150 Ha flats
  • December 31, 2024
    • 100 30 second Gain 150 Green lights
    • 30 0.02 second Gain 150 Green flats
    • 100 30 second Gain 150 Blue lights
    • 30 0.02 second Gain 150 Blue flats
    • 100 30 second Gain 150 Red lights
    • 30 0.05 second Gain 150 Red flats
  • 30 Flat Darks from library
  • 30 Darks from library

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • BlurXterminator
  • NoiseXterminator
  • StarXTerminator
  • NBColourMapper
  • Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch

NGC 2237: Rosette Nebula: Natural Palette vs SHO Palette

The Rosette Nebula, also numbered New General Catalogue (NGC) 2237 or Caldwell 49, is an emission nebula.  It is a large star-forming region containing the NGC2244 (Caldwell 50) star cluster in its center.  The star cluster was made from the gases in the nebula and contains some massive type O stars, which in turn produce radiation and stellar wind that blow away and light up the nebula around them.  The stars in this cluster are young, less than 5 million years old.  The Rosette Nebula is located in the Milky Way, approximately 5200 light years away, and it has an apparent size of 1.3 degrees, so it is approximately 120 light years across.    

When we visit the lovely dark skies of Dell City, Texas, I try to collect data on some challenging objects that I don’t think I can do from my light-polluted driveway.  I’m not always successful in meeting the challenge (super dim objects take a lot of hours of data to image), so I also try to collect data on some brighter objects so I know I’ll come home with some nice images.  The Rosette Nebula was my choice for one of my “sure it will be nice” images from our last trip. 

I think it is a stunning nebula.  I processed the data using two different palettes, ending up with three different versions.  The first palette, a “natural” palette, maps H-alpha (which is red) to red, Sii (which is also red) to a more pink color, and Oiii (which is blue) to purple/blue.  I tried different weightings/emphasis of the colors and ended up with one version where the nebula center is more blue and one version where the nebula center is more purple.  The second palette, the “Hubble” palette or SHO palette, maps Sii to red, H-alpha to green, and Oiii to blue (and then cuts out most of the green).  I also tried different weightings/emphasis of the colors, and I ended up with one version I liked the best.  I like the colors in the “natural” palette, but I think the Hubble palette does a better job of showing off the details of the nebula.

Which version do you like the best?

Camera geek info – Narrowband:

  • Williams Optics Zenith Star 73 III APO telescope
  • Williams Optics Flat 73A
  • ZWO 2” Electronic Filter Wheel
  • Antila SHO and RGB filters
  • ZWO ASI183MM-Pro-Mono camera
  • ZWO ASiair Plus
  • iOptron CEM40
  • Dell City, Texas Bortle 2-3 dark skies

Frames:

  • October 9, 2024
    • 135 60 second Gain 150 Oiii lights
    • 30 0.5 second Gain 150 Oiii flats
  • October 10, 2024
    • 129 60 second Gain 150 Ha lights
    • 30 0.2 second Gain 150 Ha flats
  • October 11, 2024
    • 27 60 second Gain 150 Red lights
    • 30 0.05 second Gain 150 Red flats
    • 26 60 second Gain 150 Green lights
    • 30 0.02 second Gain 150 Green flats
    • 25 60 second Gain 150 Blue lights
    • 30 0.02 second Gain 150 Blue flats
  • October 12, 2024
    • 129 60 second Gain 150 Sii lights
    • 30 1 second Gain 150 Sii flats
  • 30 Flat Darks from library
  • 30 Darks from library

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • BlurXterminator
  • NoiseXterminator
  • StarXTerminator
  • Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch

Post-Solar-Swing Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan ATLAS 

Comet C/2023 Tsuchinshan ATLAS looped around the sun on September 27, 2024 and started on its path back towards the outer solar system.  For a few days, it was not visible because it was too close to the sun.  But it was predicted to become visible again around October 11, and it would be the closest to the Earth on October 12, 2024. 

We were in Dell City at the time and staked out a sunset viewing spot with a long view to the west. 

We made our first attempt to see the comet on October 10, 2024.  The comet should have been barely above the horizon at sunset, and unless it was truly extraordinary, we were unlikely to be able to see it.  We were treated to a lovely sunset, but we could not spot the comet.  I had told myself this was a dry run, so I wasn’t too disappointed.  And, when we returned back to our B&B, we were treated to a rare viewing of the northern lights from Texas.

We made a second attempt to see the comet on October 11, 2024.  The comet was supposed to be higher above the horizon at sunset than the day before.  There were low clouds in the sky.  We saw a lot of “fake comets” – bright airplane contrails.  Eventually my husband found the comet with his binoculars – success!  I started taking pictures, but I hadn’t used the right settings, and when I discovered that later, I suspected that the data would not be usable.  I was right – I can see a moving smudge in the images, but it’s not good enough for PixInsight to comet align the images (and there aren’t enough stars in the images for it to star align them).

We made a third attempt – third time is the charm! – on October 12, 2024.  The comet was supposed to be more than 10 degrees above the horizon at sunset, and it had been the closest it would be to the Earth, 0.47239 AU or 70668538.14 km, just nine hours earlier.  This time there weren’t any clouds.  And this time we could easily find the comet and see that it had a huge tail!  Given my experience the night before, I made sure I was using good camera settings, and I could see the comet and its tail in single images.

I used PixInsight to stack 50 images (8.3 minutes of data) to make this final image – my first post-solar-swing image of C2023 A3.  Isn’t it beautiful?

Today, on this day of Thanksgiving, I am most thankful for my family and friends, near and far.  But I’m also thankful for all the wonder to be found in this universe we live in, and particularly for this comet.  Happy Thanksgiving!

Camera geek info:

  • Canon EOS 60D in manual mode, 4 second exposures, ISO 800
  • Canon EF 85 mm f/1.8 lens at f/11 manual focus at infinity
  • Intervalometer
  • Tripod
  • Dell City, Texas Bortle 2-3 dark skies

Frames:

  • October 12, 2024 
    • 50 10 second lights 
    • 31 0.01 second flats
    • 31 0.01 second flat darks
    • 30 10 second darks

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • BlurXterminator
  • NoiseXterminator
  • StarXterminator
  • NormalizedScaleGradient

Comet Hunting Tailgate Party: C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan ATLAS from Dell City, Texas

Our last visit to Dell City, Texas ended with a fun event: going comet hunting with new friends. 

I knew from comet hunting with my husband the previous evening that C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS would be visible in the early evening sky.  But this time, I wanted to image it over the Cornudas Mountains to the west of town.  I also wanted to have a view over the flat fields to the mountains and the sky above – which I could find by driving just a few blocks north of the center of town.

I invited some new local friends to join us, and they came in a pickup truck loaded with lawn chairs.  It was a comet tailgate party!

We had a great time visiting while we watched the sky as Venus appeared, followed by some bright stars, followed by the comet.  We could see it naked eye!  We could even see the comet’s tail naked eye!  It was pretty impressive.

It’s taken me over a month to learn how to and successfully process these pictures.  Each picture used one set of images for the comet, stars, sky, and foreground/mountains, but each part was processed separately.  The earlier pink picture where the comet is higher in the sky was made from 120 4 second shots (8 minutes of data).  The later orange picture where the comet is lower in the sky was made from 75 10 second shots (12.5 minutes of data).

One of the things I tried to do while processing was to make sure that all the fuzz around the comet and the anti-tail were real and not processing artifacts.  You can use the sliders below to compare the final images with the comet-only portion to see that, if anything, the final images show less fuzz than what was in the data.  (The comet-only data was calibrated, blur exterminated, star exterminated, comet-aligned, stacked, dynamic background extracted, and stretched.)

Comet C/2023 A3 4 second Comet Only and Final images
Comet C/2023 A3 10 second Comet Only and Final images

This event is high on my list of “coolest astro things I’ve seen.”  And I’m glad I had such a great group of folks to share it with.

What cool things have you shared with friends recently?

Camera geek info:

  • Canon EOS 60D in manual mode, 4 second and 10 second exposures, ISO 800
  • Canon EF 85 mm f/1.8 lens at f/8, manual focus at infinity
  • Intervalometer
  • Tripod
  • Dell City, Texas Bortle 2-3 dark skies

Frames:

  • October 13, 2024 
    • 120 4 second lights for pink image with higher comet
    • 75 10 second lights for orange image with lower comet
    • 30 0.01 second flats
    • 30 0.01 second flat darks
    • 30 4 second darks
    • 30 10 second darks

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • BlurXterminator
  • NoiseXterminator
  • StarXterminator
  • NormalizedScaleGradient

Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan ATLAS with M5

Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan ATLAS put on quite a show after it rounded the sun and passed by the Earth on its way likely out of our solar system.  With an orbital eccentricity greater than 1, its orbit appears to be hyperbolic, meaning it’s not coming back unless something perturbs its orbit.

In this picture, you can see the comet’s bright nucleus and coma, its long dust tail, and its anti-tail, but not a separate ion tail.

When comets travel close to the sun, solar radiation heats up the comet nucleus, and it outgasses. Outgassing delivers both gas and dust to the region around the nucleus, forming a coma, a (temporary) atmosphere around the comet.  The solar radiation and solar wind act on this coma to push the gas and dust away from the sun to form a tail.  Three separate tails can be visible: the ion tail, the dust tail, and the anti-tail. The ion tail, also called the gas tail or type I tail, is the tail formed by the ionized gasses pushed away from the comet, and it points away from the sun.  The dust tail, also called the type II tail, is the tail formed by the dust pushed away from the comet, and it stays more in the comet’s orbit and appears to curve away from the gas tail.  The anti-tail consists of the larger dust particles that were not pushed as much and remained in the comet’s orbit.  The anti-tail appears to point towards the sun, and it is only visible when the Earth passes through the comet’s orbital plane near the time when the comet passed by the sun.  Because of these special conditions to see the anti-tail, it is not observed with most comets.

Another item visible in the image is M5, a globular cluster in our galaxy.  It is the large bright “star” to the right of the comet nucleus.  Because this image was taken with an 85 mm lens, and M5 was sorted to the “stars” image in my processing, it just appears to be a large bright star.  I suspect with some additional processing, I could have made it look fuzzier, though there aren’t a lot of pixels at this scale.  The Messier objects are “fuzzy” objects that comet-hunter Charles Messier made a list of because they weren’t comets – so it’s fun to see one next to a comet.  M5 is 24,500 light years away from Earth and has an angular size of 23 arc-minutes, making it about 165 light years across.  It’s thought to be one of our galaxy’s older globular clusters, at 13 billion years old.

Processing this image was tricky for several reasons: 1) it was made from images taken with a camera on a tripod, so the sky was moving in each frame, 2) the comet was moving relative to the sky, and 3) the images were taken at dusk, when the sky gradient is also changing in every image.  I benefited greatly from following the methods and advice in Adam Block’s Comet Academy.  One additional trick I used was to run BlurXterminator in correction only mode on all the registered images as my first step since the 4 second tripod images had visible star trails. 

Getting to this image has taken almost a month of watching videos, learning new tools, and trying various tool combinations and settings.  Some of these steps had to be run on each individual image – all 233 of them – meaning some processing steps took many hours.  After all that work, I am happy with the results.

I started with this image because I thought it would be the easiest of my set of C2023A3 comet images to process … the other images are from darker skies in terms of light pollution but closer to dusk and include a foreground.  But the comet was brighter!  I’m really looking forward to processing them and sharing the result!  Hopefully they won’t take a month each to process!

Camera geek info:

  • Canon EOS 60D in manual mode, 4 second exposures, ISO 1600
  • Canon EF 85 mm f/1.8 lens, manual focus at infinity
  • Intervalometer
  • Tripod
  • Pearland, Texas Bortle 7-8 dark skies

Frames:

  • October 15, 2024
    • 233 4 second lights
    • 30 0.0025 second flats
    • 30 0.0025 second darks

Processing geek info:

  • PixInsight
  • BlurXterminator
  • NoiseXterminator
  • StarXterminator
  • StarNet2
  • NormalizedScaleGradient