NGC 90

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"NGC 90 is an interacting spiral galaxy estimated to be about 300 million light-years away in the constellation of Andromeda. It was discovered by R. J. Mitchell in 1854 and its apparent magnitude is 13.7. The galaxy is currently interacting with NGC 93 and exhibits two highly elongated and distorted spiral arms with bright blue star clusters indicative of star formation, likely caused by the interaction with its neighbor.

NGC 90 and NGC 93 form the interacting galaxy pair Arp 65."

In this image NGC 90 is centered, and NGC 93 is a little to it's upper left.

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Click on Image for Higher Resolution

Date :  September 2016
Location : Backridge Observatory, Spruce Knob, West Virginia

Equipment used :
 Lens or telescope -- Homemade 16" Newtonian with MPCC
 Mount -- AP 1200
 Camera -- QSI 683wsg with Lodestar 2x guider


Acquistion Software : ACP, MaxIm DL, Focusmax
Processing Software : PixInsight, Photoshop

Exposure Detail : SynLRGB combine    Total hours  6.5

Filter

# exposures

Time (sec)

Binning

Red

26

300

2x2

Green

26

300

2x2

Blue

26

300

2x2

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