this post was submitted on 11 Jul 2023
33 points (100.0% liked)

SpacePics

25 readers
1 users here now

A community dedicated to sharing high quality images of space and the cosmos

Rules:

  1. Include some context in the title (such as the name of the astronomical object or location where it was photographed)

  2. Only images, pictures, collages, albums, and gifs are allowed. Please link images from high quality sources (Imgur, NASA, ESA, Flickr, 500px , etc.) Videos, interactive images/websites, memes, and articles are not allowed

  3. Only submit images related to space. This may include pictures of space, artwork of space, photoshopped images of space, simulations, artist's depictions, satellite images of Earth, or other related images

  4. Be civil to one another

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Deep in the South constellation Apus lies a truly spectacular field of nebulosity. Not far from the South Celestial Pole (at declination -80º), this nebula is very rarely captured, especially in full colour. This image shows a region catalogued by Steve Mandel and Michael Wilson in early 2000s as the 9th and last entry to their "Catalogue of Unexplored Nebulae" [1]. This pioneering project identified the interstellar clouds in optical light, before only known to professional astronomers through infrared surveys. Mandel named the nebulae Integrated Flux Nebula, or IFN, a name that is frequently quoted in amateur astrophotography, but seldomly used in professional astronomy, where "galactic cirrus" is preferred.

The Galactic Cirri are veils that surround our galaxy – made of dust and gas in the interstellar space. It was first noticed on optical glass plates recorded at Palomar Observatory and subsequently cataloged by B. T. Lynds, in 1965. In the 2000s, Steve Mandel noticed faint cirrus in deep, wide field photographs near the North Celestial Pole, and labelled the nebulosity as the IFN, or the Integrated Flux Nebula. [2] It has incredibly low surface brightness, at ~22-28 mag/arcsec² (fainter than the darkest sky background on Earth), thus it is not easy to capture!

Source: Gabriel Santos

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here