by wildespace » Fri Apr 20, 2018 1:27 pm
E Fish wrote: ↑Thu Apr 19, 2018 1:14 pm
I don't fully understand the reprocessing... process.
Digital colour images are composed of the red, green, and blue channels. Hubble's narrowband images are created by assigning specific ionised gasses (like NII, Ha, and OIII) to the red, green, and blue channels respectively, resulting in a false-colour image. But in true colours, NII is actually red, so is Ha, and OIII is greenish-blue. What I did was split the original narrowband image into RGB components, then reassign NII and Ha to the red channel, and OIII to the green and blue channels (with some colour balance tweaking to give it a more pink hue like it appears in astrophotos).
I was also wondering about the "approximate true color scheme". Does that mean that if we were to actually go to that nebula in person, these are the colors we'd see? ...minus the pink O star, of course.
The bubble is 7 light years across. The light given off by those ionised gasses is extremely faint; you wouldn't be able to see it like that with the naked eye. At best, you might see some very faint grey glow, barely visible.
[quote="E Fish" post_id=281639 time=1524143686 user_id=143902]
I don't fully understand the reprocessing... process.[/quote]
Digital colour images are composed of the red, green, and blue channels. Hubble's narrowband images are created by assigning specific ionised gasses (like NII, Ha, and OIII) to the red, green, and blue channels respectively, resulting in a false-colour image. But in true colours, NII is actually red, so is Ha, and OIII is greenish-blue. What I did was split the original narrowband image into RGB components, then reassign NII and Ha to the red channel, and OIII to the green and blue channels (with some colour balance tweaking to give it a more pink hue like it appears in astrophotos).
[quote]I was also wondering about the "approximate true color scheme". Does that mean that if we were to actually go to that nebula in person, these are the colors we'd see? ...minus the pink O star, of course.[/quote]
The bubble is 7 light years across. The light given off by those ionised gasses is extremely faint; you wouldn't be able to see it like that with the naked eye. At best, you might see some very faint grey glow, barely visible.