Messier 33 - The Triangulum Galaxy

Date: September 15, 2020

Cosgrove’s Cosmos Catalog #0052

Messier 33 as captured by my William Optics 132mm Platform. (click to enlarge)

Messier 33 as captured by my William Optics 132mm Platform. (click image for full resolution voa Astrobin.com)

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    About the Target

    M33, also known as NGC 598, or more commonly known as either the Triangulum Galaxy, is located 2.73 Million Light Years away in the constellation Triangulum. It is the third-largest member of the local group of galaxies which includes M31 the Andromeda Galaxy, and our own Milky Way. It is a spiral form galaxy - once of the first spiral galaxies identified as such back in 1850. It is one of the most distant objects that can be seen with the unaided eye.

    The Annotated Image

    An annotated image of M33 was created using Pixinsight’s ImageSolver and AnnotateImage Scripts.

    The Location in the Sky

    IAU/Sky & Telescope Constellation Map of Triangulum with Messier 33 marked by the yellow arrow.

    IAU/Sky & Telescope Constellation Map of Triangulum with Messier 33 marked by the yellow arrow.

    About the Project

    I shot my first version of this about a year ago, and I just reshot it, and I am delighted with the improvements on this version. What caused those improvements? Well, time and experience - of course, but this one has an integration that is 3x what the first one had - this really helps with signal-to-noise. This has a much better image composition. This improvement resulted from the addition of the camera rotator and these the Moacu and framing tool in Sequence Generator Pro to layout and set up my compositions well before the night of shooting has begun. Finally - the images are much sharper. This resulted from my sifting over to a focus motor and the use of auto-focus routines in SGP, which kept things sharp through the whole capture sequence, which spanned two evenings.


    This image is the result of 130x150 sec exposures for a total integration time of about 5.5 hours.

    This image has also proven to be very popular - I have had a couple of people ask to make prints of it.
    — Pat ( 7-24-21)

    Compared to the First Attempt back in 2019

    The very first time I attempted M33 was back in October of 2019, just a few short months after I had gotten my first telescope platform up and running, I was very proud of this early effort, so it is always interesting to compare with the most current effort and see how things have changed. That early effort was pretty solid considering how inexperienced I was, but clearly there new one is still better in almost every way.

    You can visit the 2019 version post HERE.

    Here is a side-by-side comparison:

    My first effort on M33 in 2019 (Click to zoom)

    The Current version (Click to Zoom)


    More Information

    Light frames

    • 130 x 150 seconds, bin 1x1 @ -15C

    • Total integration time: 5.5 hours


    Cal Frames

    • 50 Bias exposures

    • 25 Dark exposures bin 1x1 @ -15C

    • 50 Flats


    Capture Hardware

    • Scope: William Optics 132mm FLT F/7 APO

    • Guide Scope: Apterna 60mm

    • Camera: ZWO ASI294MC-Pro

    • Guide Camera: ZWO ASI290Mini

    • Focus Motor: Pegasus Astro Focus Cube 2

    • Field Rotator: Pegasus Astro Falcon

    • Mount: Ioptron CEM60

    • Polar Alignment: Ioptron Ipolar integrated alignment cameras

    Software

    • Capture Software: PHD2 Guider, Sequence Generator Pro controller

    • Image Processing: Deepsky Stacker, Pixinsight, Photoshop, Coffee, extensive processing indecision and second-guessing, and much swearing…..

    Click below to see the Telescope Platform version used for this image

    Patrick A. Cosgrove

    A retired technology geek leveraging his background and skills in Imaging Systems and Computers to pursue the challenging realm of Astrophotography. This has been a fascinating journey where Art and Technology confront the beauty and scale of a universe that boggles the mind…. It’s all about capturing ancient light - those whispering photons that have traveled long and far….

    https://cosgrovescosmos.com/
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    NGC 7380 - The Wizard Nebula - in Hubble Palette with Mixed Narrowband and RGB Filters