Astronomy - USA (2022-06)

(Maropa) #1

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  1. ALL NIGHT LONG
    A star party rages under
    Californian desert skies in
    this image that spans seven
    hours. The photographer
    used a Canon EOS 6D Mark II
    to capture one-minute
    exposures at f/4 and
    ISO 4000. • Chris Cook

  2. FULL SPEED AHEAD
    Heckathorn-Fesen-Gull 1
    (upper right) is a planetary
    nebula in Cassiopeia about
    2,300 light-years distant. It
    surrounds a white dwarf in
    a binary system moving
    through space at tens of
    kilometers per second — fast
    enough to form a bow shock
    in front of it and leave a tail of
    hot hydrogen gas in its wake.
    Abell 6, another planetary
    nebula, is at lower left.



  • Jon Talbot



  1. IN PLAIN SIGHT
    IC 342 in Camelopardalis
    is just outside the Local
    Group of galaxies, only about
    11 million light-years away.
    But the dust of the Milky Way
    dims it by a couple of
    magnitudes, giving it the
    nickname of the Hidden
    Galaxy. The image was taken
    with nearly 10 hours of
    exposure on a 12-inch scope.



  • Terry Riopka



  1. THE PELICAN’S THROAT
    Impressive jets and pillars
    abound in this section of the
    Pelican Nebula (IC 5067/70)
    in Cygnus, where young stars
    are eroding away the dense
    gas and dust that birthed
    them. The image represents
    19.5 hours of exposure
    with an 8-inch scope in
    the Hubble palette.



  • Hassan Abdollahabadi


SEND YOUR IMAGES TO:
Astronomy Reader Gallery,
P.O. Box 1612, Waukesha,
WI 53187. Please include
the date and location of the
image and complete photo
data: telescope, camera,
filters, and exposures.
Submit images by email to
readergallery@
astronomy.com.

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