by Ann » Mon Oct 11, 2010 2:36 am
That's a fantastic image, Stéphane Guisard! I can't remember that I have seen the Andromeda Galaxy and the Magellanic Clouds in the same picture before. It's fantastic to be able to compare the relative size and surface brightness of these objects! And tiny M33 looks so small that you can hardly find it. But for all of that the Triangulum Galaxy is larger than both of the Clouds of Magellan!
I'm too lazy to google Gegenschein, but I would assume that the Gegenshein is the faint blue light that appers to stretch from the Andromeda galaxy down to that yellowness on the horizon... would that be the Moon? Surely it isn't the Sun? Could it be a town in the distance?
As for the zodiacal light, your guess is as good as mine!
I love how you have "anchored" the Milky Way with the help of those telescopes, which together create a landscape so weird that I would call it a "telescopescape"!
The appearance of the Milky Way is fascinating, too. I love that the North America Nebula is so very visible at far right, along with the Gamma Cygni nebulosity. I also love that NGC 6231 and adjacent nebulosity is so visible. And it isn't hard to see the Lagoon Nebula, the Eagle Nebula and the Omega Nebula, as well as M24, the extended blue "star cloud" in Sagittarius. It is interesting to see all the non-starforming brown dust "stretching across the middle two telescopes", so to speak! And I think Vega may be peeking out between two telescopes!
All in all, this is a truly delightful image!
Ann
That's a fantastic image, Stéphane Guisard! I can't remember that I have seen the Andromeda Galaxy and the Magellanic Clouds in the same picture before. It's fantastic to be able to compare the relative size and surface brightness of these objects! And tiny M33 looks so small that you can hardly find it. But for all of that the Triangulum Galaxy is larger than both of the Clouds of Magellan!
I'm too lazy to google Gegenschein, but I would assume that the Gegenshein is the faint blue light that appers to stretch from the Andromeda galaxy down to that yellowness on the horizon... would that be the Moon? Surely it isn't the Sun? Could it be a town in the distance?
As for the zodiacal light, your guess is as good as mine! :mrgreen:
I love how you have "anchored" the Milky Way with the help of those telescopes, which together create a landscape so weird that I would call it a "telescopescape"!
The appearance of the Milky Way is fascinating, too. I love that the North America Nebula is so very visible at far right, along with the Gamma Cygni nebulosity. I also love that NGC 6231 and adjacent nebulosity is so visible. And it isn't hard to see the Lagoon Nebula, the Eagle Nebula and the Omega Nebula, as well as M24, the extended blue "star cloud" in Sagittarius. It is interesting to see all the non-starforming brown dust "stretching across the middle two telescopes", so to speak! And I think Vega may be peeking out between two telescopes!
All in all, this is a truly delightful image!
Ann