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About
this Object:
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At
the northern end of constellation Cygnus is the nice
emission/reflection nebula, the "Cocoon."
It rests at the end of a long, streaming dark
nebula, Bernard 168, that extends from near the
head of the "swan," close to M39. Technically
speaking, the IC designation goes with the open cluster
of stars., whereas the nebulosity itself is identified
as Sharpless 2-165. Most of the stars in
the cluster are around magnitude 12 in brightness, with
the brightest star at magnitude 9.6.
Finding
the Cocoon is not easy since there aren't a lot of obvious
markers to direct a person to it. However, it
can be viewed in dark skies through scopes as small
as 4" using averted vision, once you know where
it is. Of course, larger apertured scopes will
make finding it and viewing it much easier. More
than likely, using a UHC or OIII filter for this object
will not help much, as a filterless view reveals more
of the detail. Perhaps this is because of the
dual nature of the nebula as both a reflector of star
light and an emitter.
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Location:
Comanche
Springs, 3RF dark sky site near Crowell, TX, and Ballauer Observatory
near Azle, TX Date: October
- November, 2005
Seeing:
3/10
Transparency: 6/10 average
over 4 nights
Temperature: Chilly (-25 and
-20 degrees C on camera)
Scope/Mount: 12.5" RCOS
RC @ f/9 and Paramount ME
Camera: SBIG STL-11000M astro
CCD camera (LRGB) and SBIG STL-6303e astro CCD camera (Ha and L)
Exposure Info: L
(Ha+R)GB
image; 330:30:20:30 minutes with 100 minutes of H-alpha blended
with red channel (10 and 20 minute subexposures for L, 20 minute
subexposures for Ha, and 5 minute
subexposures for RGB, color binned)
Processing Information:
Acquisition
with CCDSoft. Calibration
(darks/flats), registration, gradient removal, and RGB channel combine in CCDstack
(median combine). LRGB
combine and Ha blending, color balance, levels/curves, and
noise removal and local contrast enhancement (Noel Carboni's Astronomy Tools) in Photoshop CS.
Exposure Notes: Data
taken over 4 below average seeing nights...FWHM measures in the
2.8" to 3.5" range. Used both SBIG cameras for a
variety of luminance data. H-alpha blended into the red channel
only at 50% using the Lighten blending mode in Photoshop CS.

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