by Ann » Thu Dec 14, 2023 12:21 am
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Wed Dec 13, 2023 7:32 pm
Ann wrote: ↑Wed Dec 13, 2023 6:55 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Wed Dec 13, 2023 6:19 pm
This, of course, is why RGB imagery isn't very good for most emission nebulas. And why narrowband is very much the way to go, as it actually shows us what elements are present in a way that RGB seldom can.
But RGB imagery, when done carefully, does show us when OIII emission is bright and when it isn't.
Ann
Or just hides it from us.
Well, Chris, consider the Orion Nebula. I found a great LRGB picture of the Orion Nebula by Ian Howarth:
Note the grayish, ever so slightly greenish color of the Trapezium region in Ian Howarth's image. The color is due to a combination of some red Hα, a lot of green OIII and some blue starlight being scattered in the area.
You will be hard pressed to find any pictures of the Orion Nebula where the Trapezium region looks "all red". In most pictures it will look white, and in a few it will look yellow, as from a combination of red Hα and green OIII. And there are several closeups of the Trapezium region where the background looks green or blue.
So it seems clear to me that the OIII emission is a lot brighter in the Trapezium region than in the Heart Nebula. It is bright enough to very clearly affect the visual appearance of the Trapezium region. Of course, an important difference between the Trapezium region and the inner Heart Nebula is that the Trapezium region is so much smaller, so that the OIII emission is very concentrated there.
Even so, the difference is striking.
Ann
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=335617 time=1702495927 user_id=117706]
[quote=Ann post_id=335616 time=1702493722 user_id=129702]
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=335615 time=1702491552 user_id=117706]
This, of course, is why RGB imagery isn't very good for most emission nebulas. And why narrowband is very much the way to go, as it actually shows us what elements are present in a way that RGB seldom can.
[/quote]
But RGB imagery, when done carefully, does show us when OIII emission is bright and when it isn't.
Ann
[/quote]
Or just hides it from us.
[/quote]
Well, Chris, consider the Orion Nebula. I found a great LRGB picture of the Orion Nebula by Ian Howarth:
[attachment=0]Orion Nebula in LRGB Ian Howarth.png[/attachment]
Note the grayish, ever so slightly greenish color of the Trapezium region in Ian Howarth's image. The color is due to a combination of some red Hα, a lot of green OIII and some blue starlight being scattered in the area.
You will be hard pressed to find any pictures of the Orion Nebula where the Trapezium region looks "all red". In most pictures it will look white, and in a few it will look yellow, as from a combination of red Hα and green OIII. And there are several closeups of the Trapezium region where the background looks green or blue.
So it seems clear to me that the OIII emission is a lot brighter in the Trapezium region than in the Heart Nebula. It is bright enough to very clearly affect the visual appearance of the Trapezium region. Of course, an important difference between the Trapezium region and the inner Heart Nebula is that the Trapezium region is so much smaller, so that the OIII emission is very concentrated there.
Even so, the difference is striking.
Ann