M105 (NGC 3379) is an elliptical galaxy in the constellation Leo. At magnitude 9.3 it cannot be seen by naked eye. See location below.
M105 is the elliptical galaxy in the center of the photo and is part of the Leo I or M96 group of galaxies.
M105 (NGC 3379) is an elliptical galaxy in the constellation Leo. At magnitude 9.3 it cannot be seen by naked eye. See location below.
M105 is the elliptical galaxy in the center of the photo and is part of the Leo I or M96 group of galaxies.
M95 (NGC 3351) & M96 (NGC 3368) are spiral galaxies in the constellation Leo. At magnitudes 9.7 and 9.2, respectfully, they cannot be seen by naked eye. See their location below.
My first attempt on March 24th was too cloudy. I increased the exposure time and waited for a more clear night and less moon on 04/14/2023.
North (toward Polaris) is up in the photo. The picture was taken with a fully modified Canon Rebel camera (this is my one shot color camera) on a TEC 140 telescope in the Alpenglow-Torrey House Observatory in the dark sky community of Torrey, Utah (Bortle 2-3). The ten best of 14 120-second sub-frames were used and stacked in Deep Sky Stacker = twenty minute photo. Unguided, binned 2X2 (to make smaller files for remote transfer), no calibration frames. Processed in Photoshop (CS5).
Location in the night sky of the photo:
M109 (NGC 3992) is a spiral galaxy in Ursa Major (The Big Dipper). At magnitude 9.8 it cannot be seen with the naked eye. M109 is in the center of the photo. In Stellarium M109 is called the “Vacuum Cleaner Galaxy.”
M40 is an optical double star (a chance alignment of two independent stars at different distances from earth) in the constellation Ursa Major and in the center of the photo below. Ursa Major is known as the Big Dipper and is circumpolar for northern observers (it never sets). Many apparent single stars are actually double stars, held together by mutual gravity and called binary systems. Roughly half the sky’s stars are binary.
M67 (NGC 2682) is an open cluster in the constellation Cancer. At magnitude 6.1 it generally cannot be seen with the naked eye.
M44 (NGC 2632) is an open cluster in the constellation Cancer. This famous cluster is also called Praesepe (Latin for “manger”), or the Beehive Cluster. At magnitude 3.7, it can be readily seen by the naked eye on a dark night. See the location of M44 below.
M48 (NGC 2548) is an open cluster in the constellation Hydra. At magnitude 5.5 it can be seen in dark skies with the naked eye. See location of M48 below.
M93 (NGC 2447) is an open cluster also in Puppis. At magnitude 6.0 it is barely visible to the naked eye in dark skies. See below on where to look.
M46 (NGC 2437) is an open cluster in the constellation Puppis. At magnitude 6.0 it is barely visible to the naked eye in dark skies.
M46 has a little planetary nebula within the boundaries of the cluster. You can see it in the upper left center of the picture. It may or may not be part of the cluster.
M50 (NGC 2323) is an open cluster in the constellation Monoceros, and at magnitude 5.9, is barely visible to the naked eye in dark skies.