by elisabeth » Sat Mar 03, 2007 12:37 am
Thank you to all who took the time to help me out -- you are all wonderful, and I'm very grateful!
The image in question was:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap060324.html
(Rosette Nebula, March 2006)
In the end, it came down to folloing the suggestion:
SittingDownMan wrote:I know it's a little laborious, but, if you're sure it's APOD, you could try :
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/calendar/ca0501.html
and click on "Next Month" if you don't see your image on January's page.
Only 26, or 27 pages to scan. That's not too bad.
I hope you find it,
RJ.
And I must say that it was no laborious task at all! 2005-6 were great years for APOD!
Nereid was quite right, that:
Nereid wrote:The hard part, of matching the OP's description, is "with purples and blues on the outside, and reds more to the center". Most planetary nebulae are displayed with reds on the outside and blues in the middle (though there are some nice ones with greens and blues, they lack reds, esp in the centre).
I guess I'd been looking at it for so long, I'd forgotten how to "see" it! Also, why I remembered "Rosette" as "Rainbow" is quite beyond me!
Thank you all for your help -- it's so comforting to have that as my background again -- makes the situation seem less dire, somehow.
All the images you shared were gorgeous -- if/when I get tired of the Rosette Nebula, I have lots of wonderful choices awaiting me!
Thanks again!
~Elisabeth
Thank you to all who took the time to help me out -- you are all wonderful, and I'm very grateful!
The image in question was:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap060324.html
(Rosette Nebula, March 2006)
In the end, it came down to folloing the suggestion:
[quote="SittingDownMan"]I know it's a little laborious, but, if you're sure it's APOD, you could try : http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/calendar/ca0501.html
and click on "Next Month" if you don't see your image on January's page.
Only 26, or 27 pages to scan. That's not too bad.
I hope you find it,
RJ.[/quote]
And I must say that it was no laborious task at all! 2005-6 were great years for APOD!
Nereid was quite right, that:
[quote="Nereid"]The hard part, of matching the OP's description, is "with purples and blues on the outside, and reds more to the center". Most planetary nebulae are displayed with reds on the outside and blues in the middle (though there are some nice ones with greens and blues, they lack reds, esp in the centre). [/quote]
I guess I'd been looking at it for so long, I'd forgotten how to "see" it! Also, why I remembered "Rosette" as "Rainbow" is quite beyond me!
Thank you all for your help -- it's so comforting to have that as my background again -- makes the situation seem less dire, somehow.
All the images you shared were gorgeous -- if/when I get tired of the Rosette Nebula, I have lots of wonderful choices awaiting me!
Thanks again!
~Elisabeth