M 13 and NGC 6207
Globular cluster M 13 in Hercules (cropped picture) Date: 17 May 1998, 1.20h CEST Lens: C9 with focal reducer (f=1480 mm f/6.3) Guiding: C5 at 278x Exposure time: 30 minutes Film: Kodak Select Royal Gold 400 During the exposure some dew precipitated on the correction plate. Near M13 is the 11.6 mag bright spiral galaxy NGC6207 (in the top right corner). The length along the longer axis is 2.9'. Below is a picture of NGC6207 taken from the POSS which is rotated about 70° compared to my picture. The very bright core of this galaxy is overexposed on the POSS picture. The tiny fuzzy and a little bit elongated (in my picture nearly vertical) speck beside a faint star, vertical under NGC6207 and about the
width of a thumb away from the right edge, is the galaxy IC4617. This galaxy seems to be VERY faint. I couldn't find any information on that galaxy on the website of the NGC/IC-project except the coordinates. The website of the Swiss astronomical society knew that the Hubble guide
star catalog had this object registered as non-stellar of 14th mag. All I could get was a picture of the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey but no data about this object. The star next to IC4617 on the POSS picture is the faint star that I mentioned above. | |
The negative sports a much wider dyynamic range than the print. A darker print of M13 shows even stars in the center of M13 (left). | |
The picture to the left was obtained by stacking a darker and a brighter print. One problem with stacking of several prints of the same negative is the slightly different magnification which result in blurred star images or even "double stars" at the edges although I tried to compensate the magnification difference by re-scaling the picture with my image processing program. Up to now I found no satisfying solution for this problem. Nevertheless the composite shows much more details in the core of M13 but on the other hand NGC6207 remains in the dark. |