A Panorama of the Deep Sky
Description
From the photographer: “With the rain, short-lived lakes are formed in the desert and on starry nights they show a beautiful reflection of the night sky. In this photo, considering the wonderful sky in the galaxy section, I decided to introduce a number of nebulae, star clouds and star clusters that were identified in this part of the galaxy in another slide. The nebulae that have been identified are emission nebulae, that is, regions of dense gas and dust that create new stars: The Eagle Nebula (M16) and Omega Nebulae (M17) and the Trifid Nebula (M20) and the Lagoon Nebula (M8).
On dark, cloudless summer nights, the star clouds of the Milky Way Galaxy are easily visible to the eye as bright spots along the Milky Way. The Little Arc Star Cloud is actually a gap in clouds of dark interstellar dust nearby. Which provides a window-like view of distant stars in the spiral arm of the Milky Way. Star clusters are groups of stars held together by their own gravity and are divided into two categories: globular star clusters “containing older stars” and open star clusters “containing younger stars”, some of which are marked in the photo.”
Technical details:
Panorama of 6 Shots
Canon 6d, Sigma 24 mm Art, f 2.2 , exp. 10 s , ISO 5000
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