The Rosette Nebula is a popular target for astrophotographers, especially as Valentine's Day
approaches. Here are some of the images of this nebula submitted to APOD or posted to Asterisk
since Valentine's Day last year.
Have a favorite? Please tell us what it is! Have another? Please post it here!
Thank you!
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NGC 2237: Rosette Nebula
http://www.skiesburnelectric.com
Copyright: Kevin Rasso --
Rosette nebula
http://www.marius.fotografiaastronomica.com
Copyright: Màrius Duran Full size
Rosette Tour
The image is a mosaic of 3x3 with 90 hours approximately of exposition, 10 hours for each one of frame.
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Caldwell 49: Rosette Nebula without Hα
http://www.flickr.com/photos/terryhanco ... /lightbox/
Copyright: Terry Hancock --
Rosette Nebula, NGC2237, NGC2244 - HST palette
http://astrofotky.cz/~Konihlav
Copyright: Pavel Pech
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Rosette Nebula, NGC2237, NGC2244 in "Natural" Colors from Narrowband data composition
http://astrofotky.cz/~Konihlav
Copyright: Pavel Pech
Thanks to J-P Metsävainio for help processing this image!
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NGC 2244: Rosette Nebula Core
http://www.perseus.gr/Astro-DSO-NGC-2244.htm
Copyright: Anthony Ayiomamitis --
Changling Rose
http://www.tvdavisastropics.com/astroim ... 0000b3.htm
Copyright: Tom Davis Two images of the Rosette Nebula taken from Australia; hover over the image to see the the rose in a different light. One image is in LRGB and the other in Hubble Palette SHO.
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Copyright: César Cantu Quiroga http://www.astrophoto.com.mx/picture.php?/73/category/2
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http://www.scopetrader.com/steppingstone/?page=313
Copyright: Douglas Baum
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http://www.renzodelrosso.com/profondoci ... a_2008.htm
Copyright: Renzo Del Rosso
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http://www.robertfields.org/apps/photos/
Copyright: Robert Fields --
Copyright: César Cantú 2Mb:
http://www.astrophoto.com.mx/upload/201 ... 151aef.jpg
http://www.astrophoto.com.mx
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http://www.emilivanov.com/
Copyright: Emil Ivanov Higher resolution (1800 x 1336 pixels): http://www.emilivanov.com/CCD%20Images/ ... _SHO_b.jpg
Full resolution (4006 x 2975 pixels): http://www.emilivanov.com/Examples/NGC2237_SHO_.jpg (Attention: ~ 5.3 Mb!)
S II = 60 min, Ha = 60 min, O III = 60 min, ASA N12 Astrograph, DDM85 Mount, SBIG STL 11000 M Camera
The image was taken from extremely light polluted city centre
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NGC 2237 (Rosette Nebula) in 7 colors
http://www.emilivanov.com
Copyright: Emil Ivanov This is a six channel combination of narrowband and RGB exposures.
The base of the image are the S II, Ha and O III exposures respectively mapped as deep red, red and cyan, which gives a more realistic look to the narrowband image. The RGB image is overlayed to reduce the contrast in the nebula and to improve the stars' colors.
Details: S II = 60 min; Ha = 60 min; O III = 60 min; R = 30 min; G = 30 min; B = 30 min. ASA N12 Astrograph, DDM85 Mount, SBIG STL 11000 M Camera.
Higher resolution: http://www.emilivanov.com/CCD%20Images/ ... ping_b.jpg
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http://crilly.org/wp/2011/01/29/ngc-2237-9-redone/
Copyright: Jeff Crilly --
Valentine Rose(tte)
http://www.caelumobservatory.com/galler ... tele.shtml
Copyright: Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona --
Reinhold's Rosette
Copyright: Reinhold Wittich
Starlight Xpress H36, 12" Newtonian, LRGBHA=240:240:240:240:300 minutes with 15 minutes subframes
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http://www3.asiaa.sinica.edu.tw/~whwang ... e-2011.htm
Copyright: Wei-Hao Wang --
http://stasv.users.photofile.ru/photo/s ... 778922.jpg
Copyright: Stanislav Volskiy --
http://deepskycolors.com/astro/2011/02/ ... osette.jpg
Copyright: Rogelio Bernal Andreo --
http://Sgastrophotography.com
Copyright: Salvatore Grasso and Josh Knutson --
Rosette Nebula: The Heart of a Rose
Chandra X-ray Observatory | 08 Sept 2010
--This composite image shows the Rosette star formation region, located about 5,000 light years from Earth. Data from the Chandra X-ray Observatory are colored red and outlined by a white line (roll your mouse over the image above). The X-rays reveal hundreds of young stars in the central cluster and fainter clusters on either side. Optical data from the Digitized Sky Survey and the Kitt Peak National Observatory (purple, orange, green and blue) show large areas of gas and dust, including giant pillars that remain behind after intense radiation from massive stars has eroded the more diffuse gas.
A recent Chandra study of the cluster on the right side of the image, named NGC 2237, provides the first probe of the low-mass stars in this satellite cluster. Previously only 36 young stars had been discovered in NGC 2237, but the Chandra work has increased this sample to about 160 stars. The presence of several X-ray emitting stars around the pillars and the detection of an outflow -- commonly associated with very young stars -- originating from a dark area of the optical image indicates that star formation is continuing in NGC 2237. By combining these results with earlier studies, the scientists conclude that the central cluster formed first, followed by expansion of the nebula, which triggered the formation of the two neighboring clusters, including NGC 2237.
Credit: X-ray (NASA/CXC/SAO/J. Wang et al), Optical (DSS & NOAO/AURA/NSF/KPNO 0.9-m/T. Rector et al)
Baby stars in the Rosette cloud
ESA Portal - 12 April 2010
Herschel Reveals Ripening Stars Near Rosette NebulaHerschel’s latest image reveals the formation of previously unseen large stars, each one up to ten times the mass of our Sun. These are the stars that will influence where and how the next generation of stars are formed. The image is a new release of ‘OSHI’, ESA’s Online Showcase of Herschel Images.
Infrared image of the Rosette molecular cloud. Herschel collects the infrared light given out by dust and this image is a three-colour composite made of wavelengths at 70 microns (blue), 160 microns (green) and 250 microns (red). It was made with observations from Herschel’s Photoconductor Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) and the Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE). The bright smudges are dusty cocoons containing massive protostars. The small spots near the centre of the image are lower mass protostars.
Credits: ESA/PACS & SPIRE Consortium/HOBYS Key Programme Consortia
NASA JPL 2010-122 - 2010 April 12
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WISE Captures the Unicorn's Rose | 25 Aug 2010
NGC 2237: Rosette Nebula
Unicorns and roses are usually the stuff of fairy tales, but a new cosmic image taken by NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Explorer (WISE) shows the Rosette nebula located within the constellation Monoceros, or the Unicorn.
This flower-shaped nebula, also known by the less romantic name NGC 2237, is a huge star-forming cloud of dust and gas in the Milky Way Galaxy. Estimates of the nebula’s distance vary from 4,500 to 5,000 light-years away.
At the center of the flower is a cluster of young stars called NGC 2244. The most massive stars produce huge amounts of ultraviolet radiation, and blow strong winds that erode away the nearby gas and dust, creating a large, central hole. The radiation also strips electrons from the surrounding hydrogen gas, ionizing it and creating what astronomers call an HII region.
Although the Rosette nebula is too faint to see with the naked eye, NGC 2244 is beloved by amateur astronomers because it is visible through a small telescope or good pair of binoculars. The English astronomer John Flamsteed discovered the star cluster NGC 2244 with a telescope around 1690, but the nebula itself was not identified until John Herschel (son of William Herschel, discoverer of infrared light) observed it almost 150 years later.
The streak seen at lower left is the trail of a satellite, captured as WISE snapped the multiple frames that make up this view.
This image is a four-color composite created by all four of WISE’s infrared detectors. Color is representational: blue and cyan represent infrared light at wavelengths of 3.4 and 4.6 microns, which is dominated by light from stars. Green and red represent light at 12 and 22 microns, which is mostly light from warm dust.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/WISE Team