Sunday, March 08, 2026

20260307 Canon 200mm f2.8 NGC 2174 Monkey Head Nebula + IC443 Jellyfish Nebula

I went back to my Canon EF 200mm f2.8 after testing my Canon FD 300mm f2.8.

I have used a Optolong Quad Band light pollution filtyer this time.  I am trying to compare it with the Antlia Quad Band.  Preliminary ideas:

1. the Antlia Quad Band should have tighter passband, you can see if even side by side, simply less light could pass through it

2. bloating stars are a side effect of (1), and thus the Optolong Quad Band gives less bloating bright stars as a result

On setting the things up, I found that I failed to focus my 200mm lens for unknown reason.  

In order to save valuable observation time, I went to use the Guidescope with the guiding camera for polar alignment.  I even used this combination to take images of the M45, the result was quite unexpected.  Seems like a monochromatic camera has a clear edge, despite it is not a cooled camera. 

60s expoure, 11 frames in total, taken with ASI462mm and the guidescope of 230mm focal length:

I aimed at M45 since I know there will be some bright stars for focusing.  Later, I found that the lens cap was not removed.  <GRIN>

Finally, I turned to NGC 2174 and IC443 for the rest of the night.  Quite busy area in the sky, quite of subexposure was affected by satellites.  Total two hours of exposure.

(pending)

I then pulled out my S30 again, this time pointing at IC434 the horse head nebula.  Exposure of slightly more than an hour, pretty low in the sky, in the direction of a street light.  Field rotation pretty serious in that part of the sky.

It's never in a good position in the UK.

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