M 1 – The Crab Nebula
Description:
M1, the Crab Nebula is a remnant (what remains) of a supernova. This massive star explosion was observed in 1054 by a Chinese astronomer. It was then brighter than all other objects in the night sky except the Moon. The nebula was observed for the first time in 1731 by John Bevis then in 1758 by Charles Messier who made it the first object of his catalogue, hence the name M 1. In its center, there is now a pulsar rotating on itself 30 times per second and which radiates 200,000 times more energy than the Sun.
Technical details:
Telescope: Celestron Edge HD14 and 0.7x focal reducer
Mount: Paramount MX+
Camera: ZWO ASI 1600 MM
Filters Astrodon LRGB and ZWO Ha and O-III (1.25″)
Exposure: 79 6-minute subs with LRGB filters and 20 x 10 minutes with H-Alpha and Oxygen-III filters
Place: Backyard observatory in Sainte-Sophie, Qc
Date: December 2019