M108 with TEC 140 Refractor

M108 Galaxy in Ursa Major, TEC140

M108 is a galaxy about 45 million light years away in the constellation of Ursa Major.  It is sometimes called the surfboard galaxy because of its resemblance to a surfboard.  Note the huge number of tiny, distant galaxies in the background.  These are hundreds and in some cases up to two billion light years away from us.

Technical Information

I imaged M108 from my backyard observatory in Nottingham, UK on 4-5 April 2021 (two imaging sessions) when M108 was almost directly overhead.  Conditions were very cold and frosty with good seeing and transparency. I used my TEC140 refractor and Atik 460 CCD camera with Astrodon E series Gen LRGB filters (1.25").  There is almost 9.5 hours of data in this image consisting of:

Lum > 42 x 300s; Red > 24 x 300s; Green > 24x300s; Blue 24 x 300s

Everything was binned 1x1.  

Image data was captured using Sequence Generator Pro software and the equipment was was guided using OAG on my MESU 200 mount.  Processed with PixInsight.

I hope you like it!


M108 with TEC 140 Refractor
M108 in Ursa Major with TEC140

Full size image here (opens in new tab).


M108 Annotated
Annotated Version

M108 FindingChart
Finder chart

M3 Globular Cluster in Canes Venatici

M3 Globular Cluster in Canes Venatici

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M3 Globular Cluster in Canes Venatici


M63 Completed TEC 140 Atik 460

M63 - The Sunflower Galaxy

M63 is a magnificent spiral galaxy located in the Northern constellation of Canes Venatici, about 30 million light years away.  The galaxy is a member of the M51 group.  There are lots of faint galaxies in the background.


M63 Completed TEC 140 Atik 460
M63 - The Sunflower Galaxy

Technical Data

Full resolution image here (opens in new tab)

M63, often called the Sunflower Galaxy because of its resemblance to that flower, is a spiral galaxy about 27 million light years away in the constellation of Canes Venatici.  It is a member of the M51 group of galaxies.

I captured the data for this image of the galaxy from my back yard observatory in Nottingham, UK over the nights of 4th and 5th of May 2021 when M63 was high near the zenith.  Most of the data was captured in the middle of the night on an automated basis whilst I was asleep in bed!  I used my TEC140 refractor and Atik 460 CCD camera with Astrodon E Series LRGB filters.  I used off-axis guiding on my MESU200 mount.

Integration is a total of nine hours comprised of:

Luminance > 30 x 300s binned 1×1 ; Red > 22 x 300s 1×1 ; Green > 24 x 300s 1×1 ; Blue > 24 x 300s 1×1  to give a total of about 8.5 hours of integration time.  Captured with SGP pro and processed in PixInsight.


M63 Annotated
Annotated Image

M63 Inverted TEC140
Inverted Image

Annotated and inverted versions of the galaxy shown above.  The annotated version shows the many, extremely distant background galaxies present in the image, some of which are billions of lightyears away.


M63 FindingChart
Finder Chart

The finder chart to the left shows the location of the galaxy.

The image at the top of this page is 42 arc-minutes in width and 32 arc-minutes in height at an image scale of 0.927 arc-seconds/pixel.


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