AAPOD2 Image Archives
Virgo cluster: South region
The Virgo Galaxy Cluster is the nearest large galaxy cluster to our own Local Group, a vast gathering of more than a thousand galaxies bound together by gravity in the direction of the constellation Virgo. Lying about 55 million light-years away, it forms the heart of the larger Virgo Supercluster and offers one of the clearest nearby views of how galaxies assemble on the grandest scales. Dominated by giant ellipticals such as M87, along with spirals, lenticulars, and countless dwarf galaxies, the cluster reveals a rich variety of galactic forms shaped by both their internal evolution and the intense gravitational environment they inhabit.
Seen in deep wide-field images, the Virgo Cluster becomes a cosmic metropolis where galaxies crowd the frame in every direction, each island universe carrying billions of stars. Interactions between member galaxies, along with the cluster’s immense halo of hot X-ray emitting gas and dark matter, influence how stars form and how galaxies change over time. Streams of stripped material, distorted shapes, and subtle halos around the brightest members all hint at a long history of collisions and mergers. For observers and imagers alike, the Virgo Cluster is both a stunning visual tapestry and a nearby laboratory for exploring the structure and evolution of the universe itself.
NGC 3576 Statue of Liberty Nebula
Rising in the southern skies of Carina, the Statue of Liberty Nebula is a striking star-forming region whose silhouette has inspired its popular nickname. Cataloged as NGC 3576, this bright emission nebula glows from intense ultraviolet radiation produced by hot, young massive stars embedded within its core. Those energetic stars ionize surrounding hydrogen gas, causing the nebula to shine in rich reds, while darker dust lanes carve dramatic structure through the luminous cloud. Its towering central ridge and flowing arcs of gas create the impression of a robed figure holding a torch, making this celestial landmark one of the most visually evocative nebulae in the southern Milky Way.
Beyond its iconic appearance, NGC 3576 is an active stellar nursery where gravity, radiation, and stellar winds are shaping the next generation of suns. Dense knots of gas and dust are collapsing into protostars, while powerful outflows from newly formed stars sculpt cavities and pillars throughout the region. Located roughly 9,000 light-years away, the nebula offers a vivid glimpse into the complex processes that govern star birth on a galactic scale. In deep images, its intricate filaments and glowing layers reveal both the raw energy and delicate beauty of a region where stars are still emerging from the interstellar dark.
Spaghetti Nebula SH2-240
The Spaghetti Nebula, also known as Simeis 147, is a striking supernova remnant located in the constellation Taurus, about 3,000 light-years from Earth. This nebula is the result of a star that exploded in a violent supernova event, shedding its outer layers into space. The remnants form an intricate web of glowing filaments and gas, stretching across a vast region of the sky. The nebula’s name, "Spaghetti," comes from the long, tangled, and thread-like structure of its filaments, which resemble strands of pasta. These filaments are composed of ionized gas, primarily hydrogen and oxygen, and their brilliant colors reflect the intense radiation emitted as the gas is heated by the shockwaves from the supernova explosion.
The Spaghetti Nebula is an excellent example of the delicate balance between destruction and creation in the universe. The supernova explosion that formed it not only marked the death of a massive star but also enriched the surrounding interstellar medium with heavier elements, which will later go on to form new stars and planets. Scientists study remnants like the Spaghetti Nebula to understand the life cycle of stars and how these cataclysmic events contribute to the cosmic ecosystem. By observing the nebula in multiple wavelengths, including X-rays and radio waves, astronomers can gain a deeper understanding of the mechanisms behind supernovae and their role in shaping the interstellar medium.
NGC3572 nebula and NGC3532
NGC 3572, also known as the "Star Forming Nebula," is a stunning emission nebula located in the southern constellation of Centaurus. This intricate nebula spans roughly 6,000 light-years from Earth and is part of a larger molecular cloud complex known for its active star formation. The nebula is composed of gas and dust, illuminated by the intense ultraviolet radiation from young, hot stars at its core. These stars are still in their early stages of development, and the surrounding nebula is a rich environment for the formation of new stars. NGC 3572 is a dynamic region where the interplay of ionized gases and stellar winds creates intricate structures, such as gas pillars and filaments, that further enhance its ethereal beauty.
Astronomers study NGC 3572 to gain insight into the processes of star birth and evolution. The nebula's complex chemical composition provides valuable clues about the early stages of stellar life and the way stars interact with their environment. Observations of NGC 3572 in various wavelengths, from visible light to infrared and radio waves, help astronomers understand how young stars influence the surrounding nebula and how those interactions lead to the creation of new generations of stars. As one of the most active stellar nurseries in the Milky Way, NGC 3572 serves as a natural laboratory for studying the intricate processes that shape the cosmos.
Cone and Fox Fur Nebula
Cone and Fox Fur Nebula
The Cone Nebula and Fox Fur Nebula are two prominent features within a vast star-forming complex officially designated as NGC 2264. Located approximately 2,700 light-years away in the constellation Monoceros (the Unicorn), these nebulae are part of a massive nursery of gas and dust where new stars are being born.
The Cone Nebula is a dark, pillar-like structure of cold molecular hydrogen and dust spanning about 7 light-years in length.
Its conical shape is formed by the erosion of the surrounding gas cloud by intense radiation and stellar winds from young, hot stars.
The Fox Fur Nebula is an emission and reflection nebula named for its intricate, filamentary textures that resemble the head of a red fox stole.
The red areas are caused by hydrogen gas being ionized by ultraviolet radiation from hot, young stars and the blue areas are reflection nebulae created by dust scattering the light from these same stars.
The nebula is heavily influenced by the bright variable star S Monocerotis, which sits nearby and helps illuminate the surrounding gas.
Kyanite Nebula
Shapiro-2, nicknamed the Kyanite Nebula, is a newly discovered planetary nebula in Centaurus. I originally discovered the nebula in 2024 through a wide-field [O III] survey effort of the southern Galactic plane, and it was registered to the HASH PNe database. This image was obtained in collaboration with Mark McComiskey, fully revealing the Kyanite Nebula’s morphology and PN nature for the first time.
The nebula was first identified as a faint ionized oxygen shell, with an associated central star (CSPN), most likely a hot subdwarf from its corrected G magnitude, visible in the Dark Energy Camera Plane Survey. The corresponding Gaia source of the CSPN measured its distance of approximately 2500 parsecs, or ~8150 light-years, from Earth. The Kyanite Nebula spans ~1.8 parsecs, or ~5.9 light-years, extensive for a typical planetary nebula, indicating that it is in the late stages of its evolution. This is in line with its diffuse structure and extremely faint nature. Using equations to model PN expansion from Ogle et al. 2025, and considering typical PNe initial expansion velocities, its age is estimated to be 23000-46000 years.
Tidal Scars in Virgo
The intertwined galaxies NGC 4435 and NGC 4438 form one of the most dramatic interacting pairs in the Virgo Cluster. Often called “The Eyes,” their close encounter has left NGC 4438 heavily warped, its once-orderly spiral structure stretched into chaotic lanes of dust and streams of stars. By contrast, NGC 4435 appears more compact and relatively undisturbed, though it too bears subtle signs of gravitational stress. This cosmic interaction, unfolding over millions of years, offers a vivid snapshot of how galaxies evolve through encounters—reshaping their structure, triggering star formation, and redistributing gas and dust.
Hovering nearby in the same crowded cluster environment is Messier 86 (M86), a massive elliptical galaxy plunging through the intracluster medium at high speed. Its motion generates vast streams of hot gas detectable in X-ray wavelengths, evidence of ongoing interactions not just with neighboring galaxies but with the cluster itself. Together, Messier 86 and the “Eyes” galaxies illustrate the dynamic, often violent nature of galaxy clusters, where gravity, motion, and environment combine to sculpt the universe on grand scales.
The ISS transits the Moon
Punta Regilione, Marina di Modica (RG), 27.03.2026 19h:13m:41s UT
Nikon Z6III, NIKKOR Z 180-600mm f/5.6-6.3 VR, Z TC 1.4x
Copyright: Salvo Lauricella
From NGC3324 to 3293
From 3324 to 3293
Here is another one from the ASA600 Ultrawidefield. I was always fascinated by this region obove the Eta Carina nebula as it is so colorful and has a lot of interresting objects like WR23 the Gabriella Mistral nebula the cluster NGC3293 and lots of relection nebulosity.
CG4 and Gum Nebula - The World Eater
The striking cometary cloud CG4 drifts along the edge of the vast Gum Nebula, one of the largest known emission nebulae in the sky. Located in the southern constellation Vela, CG4 is part of a population of small, dense clouds known as cometary globules—compact knots of gas and dust shaped by intense radiation and stellar winds from nearby massive stars. Its rounded “head” and long streaming tail give it the appearance of a cosmic comet, earning it the popular nickname “God’s Hand.” The dense head of the globule spans about 1.5 light-years across, while its faint tail stretches for several light-years through surrounding interstellar space.
The Gum Nebula itself is an enormous shell of glowing hydrogen gas spanning hundreds of light-years, likely created by ancient supernova explosions and the winds of massive stars. Radiation from these energetic stars sculpts nearby clouds like CG4, compressing their dense cores while gradually eroding their outer layers. Inside some cometary globules, gravity may trigger the collapse of gas to form new stars, meaning these sculpted structures can become small stellar nurseries. CG4 therefore represents a fascinating snapshot of cosmic interaction—where powerful stellar forces shape delicate clouds and may ultimately spark the birth of new suns within the sprawling environment of the Gum Nebula.
Abell 21 The Medusa Nebula - Not Your Everyday PN
The ghostly Abell 21, often called the Medusa Nebula, drifts through the constellation Gemini about 1,500 light-years from Earth. Its nickname comes from the delicate network of glowing filaments that resemble the serpentine hair of the mythological Medusa. These intricate strands trace the expanding shell of gas expelled by a dying Sun-like star thousands of years ago. Because the nebula has grown so large over time—spanning nearly four light-years across—its light is extremely faint, making it a challenging but rewarding target for deep-sky imaging.
The wispy structure of Abell 21 reveals the complex interaction between the expanding stellar debris and the surrounding interstellar medium. Shock waves and turbulence stretch the gas into twisting filaments that glow softly in hydrogen and oxygen emission. At the center lies the faint stellar remnant, a hot white dwarf whose intense ultraviolet radiation energizes the surrounding gas and keeps the nebula shining. Over the next tens of thousands of years, the Medusa Nebula will continue to dissipate into space, gradually mixing its enriched material back into the galaxy and contributing to the raw ingredients for future generations of stars and planets.
The Crystal Ball Nebula aka. NGC1514
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The delicate glow of NGC 1514 shines from the constellation Taurus, about 1,500 light-years from Earth. Often called the Crystal Ball Nebula, it appears as a soft, spherical shell of gas surrounding a bright central star. The nebula was discovered in 1790 by William Herschel, who was surprised to find a hazy cloud surrounding what looked like an ordinary star—one of the earliest hints that some stars are embedded within glowing nebulae. Today we understand that NGC 1514 is a planetary nebula, the expanding outer atmosphere of a dying Sun-like star that has shed its outer layers into space.
At the center lies a remarkable stellar system containing two stars locked in a close binary orbit. Their interaction likely shaped the nebula’s unusual structure, including faint rings and delicate shells of gas stretching outward for several light-years. Ultraviolet radiation from the hot stellar remnant energizes the expanding material, causing it to glow in subtle shades of blue and green from ionized oxygen and hydrogen. Though planetary nebulae represent a brief phase in stellar evolution lasting only tens of thousands of years, objects like NGC 1514 reveal how dying stars recycle enriched material back into the galaxy—material that may one day become part of new stars, planets, and perhaps even life.
Despite appearances, the surface of the Moon has color and it is possible to capture it with a color or monochrome camera with filters. Each color is due to the large-scale presence of some type of mineral in the lunar crust, from basalts and iron oxides to titanium.
The color tones are very subtle, but real (it is not synthetic color), so during image processing the color saturation must be increased to make it visible, taking care of luminance as a source of detail and contrast.
Headphone Nebula (PK 164+31.1)
The Headphone Nebula, also cataloged as PK 164+31.1, is an enormous and extremely faint planetary nebula located in the constellation Lynx. Spanning nearly four light-years across, this ghostly shell of gas represents the final stages of a dying Sun-like star. Its nickname comes from the nebula’s symmetrical arcs of glowing gas, which resemble the shape of a pair of headphones surrounding a faint central star. Because its expanding gas has spread over such a large region of space, the nebula’s surface brightness is very low, making it a challenging but rewarding target for deep astrophotography.
The delicate structure of the Headphone Nebula traces material that was expelled thousands of years ago as the aging star shed its outer layers. Ultraviolet radiation from the hot stellar remnant now excites the expanding gas, causing it to glow faintly in hydrogen and oxygen emission. Over time, the nebula will continue to disperse into interstellar space, enriching the galaxy with heavier elements created inside the star during its lifetime. Objects like the Headphone Nebula illustrate the quiet but profound fate awaiting many stars, including our own Sun billions of years from now.
Chaotic South of Eta Carina nebula complex
The Eta Carina Nebula Complex lies within the vast Carina Nebula, one of the most active and massive star-forming regions in our galaxy. Located about 7,500 light-years away in the southern constellation Carina, this enormous nebular complex contains towering clouds of gas and dust illuminated by clusters of hot, young stars. Intense ultraviolet radiation from these stars sculpts the surrounding material into glowing ridges, pillars, and cavities, revealing the turbulent environment where new generations of stars continue to form.
At the heart of the region lies the unstable giant star Eta Carinae, one of the most massive and luminous stars known in the Milky Way. In the 1840s it underwent a violent outburst now known as the Great Eruption of Eta Carinae, briefly becoming the second-brightest star in the night sky and ejecting huge clouds of gas that formed the expanding Homunculus Nebula. Today the broader Eta Carina complex remains a dramatic cosmic laboratory, where massive stars shape their surroundings through intense radiation, stellar winds, and explosive eruptions—processes that both destroy and create the raw material for future stars and planets.
NGC 2683
Seen almost perfectly edge-on from our vantage point in the constellation Lynx, NGC 2683 is a striking spiral galaxy often nicknamed the UFO Galaxy because of its sleek, lens-shaped appearance. Located roughly 20–25 million light-years away, the galaxy’s thin disk is threaded with intricate lanes of dark interstellar dust that slice across its bright central bulge. From this perspective, the galaxy’s spiral structure is mostly hidden, but the flattened stellar disk and warped dust patterns reveal the dynamic processes shaping its stars and gas.
Unlike many nearby spirals, NGC 2683 appears relatively isolated, with no obvious large companion galaxies disturbing its structure. This quiet environment allows astronomers to study how spiral galaxies evolve when left largely undisturbed by gravitational interactions. Streams of faint gas extend above and below the disk, hinting at energetic processes such as supernova-driven winds that push material into the galaxy’s halo. Viewed edge-on, NGC 2683 offers a dramatic cross-section of a spiral galaxy, highlighting the layered structure of stars, gas, and dust that make up these vast island universes.
The Northern Trifid Nebula
Located in the constellation Taurus, NGC 1579 is a striking but lesser-known star-forming region sometimes called the Northern Trifid Nebula. Its nickname comes from the dark dust lanes that appear to divide the glowing cloud into several sections, reminiscent of the famous Trifid Nebula. The nebula lies embedded within a complex of interstellar gas and dust where new stars are actively forming. Bright blue reflection light from young stars mixes with faint red emission from energized hydrogen, while thick filaments of dark dust carve dramatic shapes across the glowing cloud.
At the heart of NGC 1579, energetic young stars illuminate and sculpt their dusty surroundings, creating a layered tapestry of reflection nebulae, emission regions, and opaque molecular clouds. These dark lanes are not empty space but dense concentrations of cold dust that obscure the light behind them while providing the raw material for future stellar systems. Though far less famous than its southern namesake, NGC 1579 offers a vivid glimpse into the chaotic environments where stars are born—where gravity, radiation, and turbulence slowly transform cold cosmic clouds into new suns.
Hydrogen Symphony in Monoceros
This wide-field image captures the intricate interplay between stellar birth and stellar death in the Monoceros constellation. At upper right glows the Rosette Nebula, a stellar nursery energized by young massive stars. Left of center, the Cone Nebula and the Christmas Tree Cluster mark another active star-forming complex embedded in turbulent gas and dust. Together, these structures span hundreds of light-years, illustrating the cosmic cycle: massive stars form within molecular clouds, live briefly, and end violently — enriching and reshaping the very material from which new stars will emerge.
NGC 5128, Centaurus A
The galaxy NGC 5128, more commonly known as Centaurus A, is one of the closest and most striking active galaxies in the sky. Located about 12 million light-years away in the southern constellation Centaurus, it appears as a bright elliptical galaxy dramatically split by a thick, dark lane of dust. This unusual appearance is thought to be the result of a past collision and merger with a smaller spiral galaxy. The interaction stirred vast clouds of gas and dust, forming the prominent band that slices across the galaxy’s glowing core and fueling new bursts of star formation within the otherwise older elliptical system.
At the center of NGC 5128 lies a supermassive black hole millions of times the mass of the Sun, which powers the galaxy’s intense activity. As matter spirals toward the black hole, enormous jets of high-energy particles are launched outward, producing powerful radio emissions that extend far beyond the visible galaxy. Because of this, Centaurus A is classified as one of the nearest radio galaxies, making it a key target for astronomers studying black holes, galaxy mergers, and energetic cosmic jets. Its combination of bright starlight, dark dust structures, and energetic outflows makes NGC 5128 both visually dramatic and scientifically important.