Ngc 2014

ACQUISITIONPARAMETRES ACQUISITION
ObjetFiltresBinTemps PoseNombres PosesTemps Total
NomNGC 2014Luminance 1 x 1150”2349H75
ConstellationDoradeRouge 1 x 1150”994H13
Distance158 000 ALVert 1 x 1150”964H00
Détail prise de vueBleu 1 x 1150”933H88
LieuEl Sauce ChiliS2 1 x 1600”14123H50
Date acquisition13/09 à 03/12/20241 x 1 600”14624H33
SetupO3 1 x 1600”14123H50
InstrumentPlanewave CDK 14Totaux95093H08
Diamètre356 mmBias1X199
Focale2563 mmDark1X151
Rapport F/D7,2Flat1X111
MontureMathis Mi500/750Acquisition faite parCecil Navick AstroVision
Caméra acquisitionMoravian C4 36×36 CMOSTraitement fait parTeam ARO-Francis Bozon
Caméra de guidageZWO Asi 1600 mmLogiciels utilisés
Montage de guidageDO Skymeca 3”AcquisitionTheSkyX , Focusmax, Maxpilote
Echantillonage0,72 arcsTraitementPixinsight, Photoshop

COMMENTS ON THE OBJECT:

NGC 2014 is an open cluster associated with an emitting nebula in the constellation Dorado. This cluster and nebula are located in the Large Magellanic Cloud.

NGC 2014 contains a group of large, bright stars that are 10 to 20 times larger than our Sun. The ultraviolet radiation from these stars has heated the surrounding gas, causing bubble-like structures to form. The area continues to experience active star formation.

NGC 2020 glows an intense blue, shaped by an enormous Wolf Rayet star that has ejected its outer layers. The Wolf Rayet star that illuminates it shines 200,000 times brighter than our Sun.

We can also see Ngc 2032 and Ngc 2029, which are also emission nebulae.

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ASCENSION DROITE: 05h32’19,9s

DÉCLINAISON: -67°41′ 23”