University Lowbrow Astronomers

Deep Sky Astronomy Pictures
[M13]

This page contains images produced by members of the University Lowbrow Astronomers.

M13
by David Tucker

M13

This is an image of the Globular Cluster M13, taken with my beautiful new (well, new/used) Stellarvue 80/F9 refractor.

It was taken in August 2005. The image represents about 10 frames (out of 20 taken) at 40 seconds, using an ATiK 2HS camera. The scope performed very well, although my old EQ3 mounting would have probably preferred to hold a lighter scope. As usual, the image was taken from my increasingly light polluted backyard in Howell, Michigan.

Globular clusters are formed when a huge cloud of interstellar gas “condenses” to form thousands of separate stars, and the mutual gravitational attraction between the stars (“Gravitational Binding Energy”) is strong enough to keep the stars from wandering apart despite there own “relative motions,” so the stars remain tightly bound together pretty much forever. M13 is probably the brightest such object in the northern sky. It is visible to the naked eye on very clear nights, and covers about the same area of sky as the full moon.

Hope ya all like it.

Previous       Next

Links

Copyright Info

Copyright © 2015, the University Lowbrow Astronomers. (The University Lowbrow Astronomers are an amateur astronomy club based in Ann Arbor, Michigan).
University Lowbrow Astronomers Privacy Policy
This page revised Tuesday, April 10, 2018 7:08 PM.
This web server is provided by the University of Michigan; the University of Michigan does not permit profit making activity on this web server.
Do you have comments about this page or want more information about the club? Contact Us.