Stuff in the Sky

It was a busy night at the Observatory on Sunday night/Monday morning before sunrise. The hope was to acquire 3 separate targets through the night. Having been on furlough for the better part of a year and a half, the plan was to go after well-known deep-space objects (DSOs) to refresh and hone skills.

The Galaxy Hunters were the first group to come in, with orders from the top brass to target M 31, the Andromeda Galaxy, which oddly enough, is found in the constellation Andromeda, not the constellation M 31. At approximately 2.54 million light years distant, M 31 is one of the farthest objects visible to the naked eye, appearing as a faint smudge of light to the west of the "W" Cassiopeia. By a strange coincidence, M 31 is the 31st entry in Messier's catalogue (this sort of coincidence seems to happen very regularly, see the next target further below).

Observations by the Spitzer Space Telescope in 2006 revealed that M 31 contains roughly one trillion stars, several times the number in our own galaxy (about 300 to 400 billion). The estimated luminosity of M 31, some 26 billion Suns, is about 25% higher than the Milky Way's; however, the rate of star formation in the Milky Way is much higher, with M 31 producing about 1 solar mass per year, compared with 3 to 5 solar masses for the Milky Way. Likewise, the rate of supernovae in M 31 is about half that of the Milky Way. Until now, only one supernova has been recorded in M 31, in 1885, and imaginatively designated S Andromedae.

M 31 (Andromeda): 55 X 180 second light exposures; 50 X 180 second dark exposures, multispectrum broadband filter:

Andromeda - PS-vibrance copy.jpg

Next up was M 45, the 45th entry in Messier's catalogue (see above M 31 information for a similar coincidence). M 45 is also popularly referred to as Pleiades, the seven sisters, and the Subaru cluster (Note, Subaru is also the name of a Japanese auto manufacturer, which uses a 7-star cluster as their logo - we are not sure which came first, but the crack research staff at the Observatory is scouring historical verify the originator). Going forward, to avoid confusion, we shall refer to them as Pleiades.

The Pleiades is an open-star cluster in the constellation Taurus approximately 440 light years distant. There are over 1,000 confirmed members in the cluster, with a total mass estimated at about 800 Suns. The stars in the Pleiades are thought to have formed together around 100 million years ago; its brightest members are all hot, young, blue-white class B giants and subgiants, with absolute magnitudes from about -1.5 to -2.5.

In the Norther hemisphere, the Pleiades is easily seen by the naked eye in the winter months, summer months in the southern hemisphere. Because of its prominence in the night sky, Pleiades has been the subject of much classical mythology. In Hindu mythology, the Pleiades are much revered and referred to as Krittika, the six mothers of the war god Skanda, who developed six faces. The earliest Greek references to the Pleiades were by Homer in the Iliad and Odyssey, around 750 and 720 B.C., and by Hesiod, about 700 B.C. The nine brightest stars of the Pleiades are named for the Seven Sisters of Greek mythology: Sterope, Merope, Electra, Maia, Taygeta, Celaeno, and Alcyone, along with their father Atlas and mother Pleione. As daughters of Atlas, the Hyades were sisters of the Pleiades. The Pleiades are also mentioned in many other and diverse cultures, including the Maori (who call them "Matariki") and Australian Aborigines, the Chinese, the Mayans (who called them "Tzab-ek"), the Aztecs ("Tianquiztli"), and the Sioux and Cherokee of North America.

M 45 (the Pleiades/The Seven Sisters/Subaru/Matariki/Tzab-ek/Tianquiztli ...): 55 X 120 second light exposures; 50 X 120 dark exposures, multi spectrum broadband filter:

Pleiades - defraction - PS - Vibrance copy.jpg

Labelled:

Pleiades - defraction - PS - Vibrance-Labelled copy.jpg

Thanks to SkySafari 6 Pro for providing the information.

The Imaging group are waiting for computer time to process the third target, hopefully we will be able to post tomorrow.

Cheers from the crew at the Canuck Observatory.
 
Just heard on NPR that a Seattle based photographer was named "2025 Astrophotographer of the Year" for the image below "Flying Bat and The Giant Squid Nebula", third attempt over 3 years shooting from California, more info and other amazing entries on the links below:



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Has been on the Observatory's list for some time - it is a very challenging target; an extraordinary image - now is actually a good time to try and capture as it is relatively high in the sky, our problem at the Observatory will be the lack of open sky - would only be able to capture a few hours at a time.
 
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Breaking News:

The Canuck Observatory has placed its lead writer on indefinite administrative leave pending a full investigation and review of what has been described as a serious breach of internal policy. According to an unnamed source, the investigation stems from the post of 30 September 2025 (Post #461: https://pnwflyfishing.com/forum/index.php?threads/stuff-in-the-sky.247/post-258872).

As explained by the source, the Observatory retains all rights to its images and reserves the right to withhold any images that management deems unsuitable for release to the public. As such, internal policies and SOPs prohibit the forecasting of images to be released. The post of 30 September 2025 appears to have breached this policy with the statement that the Observatory hoped to "acquire 3 separate targets through the night", then stating at the end of the post "The Imaging group are waiting for computer time to process the third target, hopefully we will be able to post tomorrow". The source went on to explain that the review will be thorough and comprehensive and will include the writer's somewhat flippant and tongue-in-cheek writing style, which the source stated does not necessarily reflect the brand of excellence the Observatory wishes to project.

The source stressed that the suspension leave of absence is purely an internal matter and completely unrelated to recent high-profile suspensions that have been the focus of much reporting in the popular press.

Messages have been left with the Canuck Observatory for a response to the reporting, but to date, there has been no response.

A leaked version of the so-called "third image", C/2025 A6 (Lemon), has been obtained:

C:2025 A6 Lemmon-PS-vibrance copy2.jpg
 
File it under "It is hard to find good help these days"

From the official Canuck Observatory website (www.doesntreallyexist.hah):

"It has come to our attention that a so-called 'Breaking News' story appeared recently on a fly fishing(?) website. The story is completely false and should be considered fake news. The source of the story was a recently terminated, disgruntled intern from the writing department who clearly had an axe to grind. Our lead writer has not been suspended or placed on leave and there is no active investigation. We will not confirm or deny that the image of C/2025 A6 (Lemon) posted on the aforementioned website originated from the observatory; however, it should be noted that all images released by the Observatory are watermarked, indicating their authenticity, as is seen in the below image of C2025 A6 (Lemon), a magnitude 6.6 comet currently in the constellation Leo Minor.

C:2025-A6 - Lemon-PS- Vibrabce-2 copy.jpg

We apologize to our loyal followers for any confusion or stress that the fake news story may have caused.

Sincerely

Canuck from Kansas
Senior Vive President of Operations
Canuck Observatory"

Hmmm, you just don't know what you can believe these days.
 
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Yesterday's 2025 Harvest Supermoon as far as my old not super cellphone captured balancing it from my spotting scope eyepiece, looked much better "in person". Timely moon as we had some freshly harvested mushrooms and coho, potatoes were store bought, did not get to plant any this year. Today's harvest continues with quince and grapes. Love this time of the year.
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Outstanding, keep'em coming please!!
I’m ready to get some imaging time in if the weather would cooperate now that my back has healed enough I can lift the equipment to move it outside and back in when I’m done. I have a new main camera a 533mc cool with no amp glow and a deeper well and better guide camera my tracking is much improved. I also switched to an off axis guider allowing me longer exposures… now if the clouds and air traffic will cooperate, lol someday soon.

IMG_5338.pngIMG_5344.pngIMG_5343.png
 
So far I’ve only been live stacking, I need to understand plan mode better and gain the ability to image the same object for multiple days or figure out how to do that in processing?
 
I’m ready to get some imaging time in if the weather would cooperate now that my back has healed enough I can lift the equipment to move it outside and back in when I’m done. I have a new main camera a 533mc cool with no amp glow and a deeper well and better guide camera my tracking is much improved. I also switched to an off axis guider allowing me longer exposures… now if the clouds and air traffic will cooperate, lol someday soon.

View attachment 170457View attachment 170458View attachment 170459
So far I’ve only been live stacking, I need to understand plan mode better and gain the ability to image the same object for multiple days or figure out how to do that in processing?

Very nice set-up. I have been considering upgrading to a ZWO ASI2600. Would also like a longer focal length to get some planets and better planetary nebulae (Schmidt-Cassegrain maybe?), but just not sure I can justify it at this point

I don't do live stacking, but only imaged over multiple sessions a few times, butI didn't find stacking to be a major issue.
 
The 2600 is a great
Very nice set-up. I have been considering upgrading to a ZWO ASI2600. Would also like a longer focal length to get some planets and better planetary nebulae (Schmidt-Cassegrain maybe?), but just not sure I can justify it at this point

I don't do live stacking, but only imaged over multiple sessions a few times, butI didn't find stacking to be a major issue.
Thats a great camera and I’m sure it will get you great images, I might be wrong but I think sensor size acts in a similar way as the eye piece diameter the larger sensor will get you a wider field of view with greatly added resolution there are online tools I think there is one here you can get a comparison for different fl, camera and reducer if using one to check if it’s all optimized for you targets here, https://telescopius.com/calculator.

There’s some great deals on cloudy nights I’ve bought a few things there and always had good luck.

What mount will this all go on?
 
The 2600 is a great

Thats a great camera and I’m sure it will get you great images, I might be wrong but I think sensor size acts in a similar way as the eye piece diameter the larger sensor will get you a wider field of view with greatly added resolution there are online tools I think there is one here you can get a comparison for different fl, camera and reducer if using one to check if it’s all optimized for you targets here, https://telescopius.com/calculator.

There’s some great deals on cloudy nights I’ve bought a few things there and always had good luck.

What mount will this all go on?
Yup, use Telecopius, also SkySafari 6 pro provides a preview of the FoV.

Yeah, the mount is another issue if I want a SCT, current mount is an Ioptron CEM26, which I really like (really smooth, quiet, etc), but might be a little small for an SCT payload, so again, hard for me to justify the expense of "upgrade" at this point.
 
Very recent images appear to suggest that C/2025 R2 Swan has lost its tail. When first discovered it had a beautiful long tail:

Screenshot 2025-10-19 at 5.52.24 PM.png

However, the comet was not viewable in much of the northern hemisphere, as it was above the horizon only during the daylight hours. It is now visible in the early evening in the southwestern sky, but unfortunately, very recent images suggest it has lost its tail, and indeed, the image captured by the observatory last night was, shall we say, underwhelming, until you consider this is a once in a lifetime event; R2 Swan, that is unless you're still alive, or perhaps re-incarnated in the year 24580.

C/2025 R2 Swan: 15 x 120 second exposures, 15 x 120 second darks exposures. multispectra broadband filter:

C:2025 R2 Lemon copy.jpg

Cheers
 
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