by Ann » Sat Apr 08, 2017 6:16 pm
Chris Peterson wrote:De58te wrote:NCTom wrote:Given this came from Spitzer and enhanced with false color, what does the heavy green represent even to coloring a nice spiral galaxy near the bottom? I also wondered about the red dots, the left one of which has a pretty halo.
The "stunning infrared portrait" link says, " For this Spitzer image, infrared light at wavelengths of 3.6 and 4.5 microns is rendered in blue, 8.0 microns in green, and 24 microns in red. "
FWIW, that nominally translates to 450° C material for blue, 90° C material for green, and -150° C material for red. (Those are the blackbody peaks; the curves are very broad, of course, so the numbers only give a sense of the temperature range for each filter.)
450
o C doesn't do justice to 32,000K Zeta Ophiuchi. That's infrared for you.
I remember, long ago when three-color mapped infrared photography was pretty new, I saw a splendid-looking
apparently RGB picture of a star field in, I think, Carina. There were two bright and extremely blue stars in that field, and they looked terrific. I spent hours trying to identify them, until, to my horror (yes!), I realized that they were actually a pair of red M-type giants!! They looked so blue because they are so red - well, they sure emit a lot of 450
o C infrared light! If
Venus was photographed in infrared light and color-mapped in the same way, it too would look brilliantly blue!
But Zeta Ophiuchi's bow shock looks great in infrared. The center of the Milky Way galaxy does, too.
Ann
[quote="Chris Peterson"][quote="De58te"][quote="NCTom"]Given this came from Spitzer and enhanced with false color, what does the heavy green represent even to coloring a nice spiral galaxy near the bottom? I also wondered about the red dots, the left one of which has a pretty halo.[/quote]
The "stunning infrared portrait" link says, " For this Spitzer image, infrared light at wavelengths of 3.6 and 4.5 microns is rendered in blue, 8.0 microns in green, and 24 microns in red. "[/quote]
FWIW, that nominally translates to 450° C material for blue, 90° C material for green, and -150° C material for red. (Those are the blackbody peaks; the curves are very broad, of course, so the numbers only give a sense of the temperature range for each filter.)[/quote]
450[sup][size=85]o[/size][/sup] C doesn't do justice to 32,000K Zeta Ophiuchi. That's infrared for you.
I remember, long ago when three-color mapped infrared photography was pretty new, I saw a splendid-looking [i][b]apparently[/b][/i] RGB picture of a star field in, I think, Carina. There were two bright and extremely blue stars in that field, and they looked terrific. I spent hours trying to identify them, until, to my horror (yes!), I realized that they were actually a pair of red M-type giants!! They looked so blue because they are so red - well, they sure emit a lot of 450[sup][size=85]o[/size][/sup] C infrared light! If [url=http://space-facts.com/wp-content/uploads/venus.png]Venus[/url] was photographed in infrared light and color-mapped in the same way, it too would look brilliantly blue!
But Zeta Ophiuchi's bow shock looks great in infrared. The center of the Milky Way galaxy does, too.
Ann