The images below illustrate the point. I've been trying to catch a new image of the Horsehead, and I'm not entirely satisfied with what I have as of yet, but I can use the H-alpha image that I have taken and combine it with the ESO's Horsehead (used here with permission). This allows both visible and H-alpha in one image. The infrared colors are all imaginary, of course, because the infrared lies outside the visible spectrum. H-alpha, on the other hand, lies in the red part of the visible spectrum and is colored red in this image:
In black and white, the image would look like this:
Without the infrared, the Ha shows a much less interesting Horsehead:
Thanks and congratulations to the ESO and collaborators for providing a beautiful image of what would otherwise be an invisible cloud of dust!
2 comments:
Is there an astronomy club in The Woodlands or Spring or Conroe? I travel to Houston for the Houston Astronomical Society, but something closer to home would be nice. Barring that, do you know of a good place to view in The Woodlands? I'm too close to Lake Woodlands to get dark(ish) skys. Great pictures--thanks for sharing them.
Hey, Anonymous. Nope. I wish there was a "The Woodlands Astronomical Society." There is an astronomy club in Huntsville--the Huntsville Amateur Astronomy Society. That club meets at the Sam Houston State Observatory north of Huntsville. Then there is the North Houston Astronomy Club, but that meets in Kingwood. There is no really great place to observe in The Woodlands, but the best I have seen is Terramont Park. The Park has a hill behind which one can hide from the street lights. There is also the park just south of Galatas Elementary. One has to get far out on the grass away from the parking lot, but that's not bad, either, for suburbia.
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