What is a Nitrogen II filter good for?
Posted: Thu Jun 12, 2014 8:36 am
What can an [NII] filter tell me about the astrophysics of an object that I can't learn with H-alpha, [OIII], and [SII] ? So far, the few objects I've photographed through my 3 NM [NII] filter look exactly the same as they do in H-alpha.
To try to make the pitch of my question more concrete, my very limited understanding of my own images is that [OIII] will be strong where there is sufficient energy to produce the relevant excited state, say near the white dwarf of most planetary nebulae, or near a type O star, or perhaps at a very energetic shock front. Conversely, [SII] might be strong in relatively tenuous gas near a supernova remnant (eg Pencil nebula seems a good example), but very weak around the outer ejecta of the non-SNR Norma bipolar nebula, even though the distant outer shell looks rather similar to a SNR.
Can you suggest any objects (star-forming regions, SNR's, WR nebulae, PN's, etc) where an [NII] filter might be especially informative? (I'm typically using 1 hour subs with a 16803 chip on a 20 inch scope).
Cheers,
Mike
To try to make the pitch of my question more concrete, my very limited understanding of my own images is that [OIII] will be strong where there is sufficient energy to produce the relevant excited state, say near the white dwarf of most planetary nebulae, or near a type O star, or perhaps at a very energetic shock front. Conversely, [SII] might be strong in relatively tenuous gas near a supernova remnant (eg Pencil nebula seems a good example), but very weak around the outer ejecta of the non-SNR Norma bipolar nebula, even though the distant outer shell looks rather similar to a SNR.
Can you suggest any objects (star-forming regions, SNR's, WR nebulae, PN's, etc) where an [NII] filter might be especially informative? (I'm typically using 1 hour subs with a 16803 chip on a 20 inch scope).
Cheers,
Mike