Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Hercules (Her)  ·  Contains:  HD156074  ·  HD156282  ·  HD156535  ·  HD156925  ·  IC 4645  ·  IC 4648  ·  M 92  ·  NGC 6323  ·  NGC 6327  ·  NGC 6329  ·  NGC 6332  ·  NGC 6336  ·  NGC 6341  ·  NGC 6344
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Messier 92, Scott Fisher
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Messier 92

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
Messier 92, Scott Fisher
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Messier 92

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Description

Messier 92 (M92)

Svbony 503 102ED with field flattener - FL 571
Canon T5i - not modified for astrophotography
AVX, ZWO 30F4, ASI 120mini
CLS filter
23X2min subs at ISO 800 for 46min of imaging from my bortle 5backyard
APT, PHD2, CPWI,
SIRIL, Photoshop
Imaged from my bortle 5 backyard with the company of a billion mosquitoes.

Globular clusters are great to see visually, this is my first imaged cluster. Imaged while I waited for another target to rise. Summer means short nights, full trees, and bugs - imaging challenges.

Located 27,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Hercules, this globular cluster — a ball of stars that orbits our galaxy’s core like a satellite — was first discovered by the German astronomer Johann Elert Bode in 1777.

With an apparent magnitude of 6.3, M92 is one of the brightest globular clusters in the Milky Way and is visible to the naked eye under good observing conditions. The cluster is very tightly packed with stars, containing roughly 330,000 stars in total.

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Messier 92, Scott Fisher