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HENIZE 70 (aka N 70)
Super bubble in the Large Magellanic Cloud
(ra: 5:45.5 / dec -67:54'17'')
January 2012, Camping La Porteņa - San Antonio de Areco
Buenos Aires, Argentina
DATA
TYPE: Gas & Dust Bubble in LMC
APPARENT MAGNITUDE: n/a
SIZE: 10 arcs minutes
DISTANCE: 160,000 light years
OBJECT DESCRIPTION AND IMAGE SESSION
Because the
lifetimes of massive O and B stars are measured in only tens of millions of
years, after one supernova has swept clear a bubble around itself, there
isn't enough time for the interstellar medium to back-fill the cavity before
other stars explode in the same region. Each subsequent supernova will
rejuvenate the cavity left by the previous ones. These superbubbles offer
astronomers a chance to explore this crucial connection between the
lifecycles of stars and the evolution of galaxies.
Karl Gordon Henize, Ph.D. (17 October 1926 - October 5, 1993) was an
astronomer, NASA astronaut, space scientist, and professor at Northwestern
University. He was stationed at several observatories around the world. He
was in the astronaut support crew for Apollo 15 and Skylab 2/3/4. In 1956,
Henize published the Catalogues of Hα-Emission Stars and Nebulae in the
Magellanic Clouds. The paper references many objects which bear his name.
(*) NASA APOD
IMAGE INFORMATION
SCOPE: Celestron SCT 8" working with FR/FF Starizona at 0.8
MOUNT: Sky Watcher HEQ6
SKY CONDITIONS: Rural Skies - seeing bad - Dew in the plate corrector took down the image resolution.
CAMERAS: QSI 583 WS -10Cē
FILTERS: Baader 31 mm LRGB
EXPOSURES: LHaRGB (40,70,20,20,20) L bin 1x1
GUIDING: William Optics ZenithStar 66 f6. Starlight Xpress Lodestar Camera. PHD Guiding
PROCESSING: Images Plus, NASA Photoshop Fits Liberator, Photoshop CS