The Flickr Caldwell7 Image Generatr

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NGC2403 (Caldwell 7) by Davide Simonetti

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

NGC2403 (Caldwell 7)

The first opportunity to do some imaging in a long time. We opted for a fairly simple target and one we haven't imaged for 6 years. With a very clear night and everything working properly, we were able to get a lot of exposure on this object which resulted in a much better image and easier processing.
NGC 2403 (also known as Caldwell 7) is an intermediate spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardalis. It is approximately 8 million light-years distant and 90,000 light-years in diameter. It bears a similarity to M33, containing numerous star-forming H II regions.

15-16/03/2025
063 x 300-second exposures at Unity Gain (139) cooled to -11°C to -13°C
079 x dark frames
065 x flat frames
100 x bias/offset frames
Binning 1x1
Total integration time = 5 hours and 15 minutes

Captured with APT
Guided with PHD2
Processed in Nebulosity and Photoshop
Astrometry assistance from ASTAP

Equipment
Telescope: Sky-Watcher Explorer-150PDS
Mount: Skywatcher EQ5
Guide Scope: Orion 50mm Mini
Guiding Camera: ZWO ASI120MC
Imaging Camera: ZWO ASI1600MC Pro
Baader Mark-III MPCC Coma Corrector
Light pollution filter

NGC2403 Spiral Galaxy in Camelopardilus by Steve J Peters

© Steve J Peters, all rights reserved.

NGC2403 Spiral Galaxy in Camelopardilus

NGC 2403 (also known as Caldwell 7) is an intermediate spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardalis.

Some 10 million light-years distant and about 50,000 light-years across, the spiral galaxy also seems to have more than its fair share of giant star forming regions.

~~~~~

Telescope: Celestron C11-A XLT Schmidt Cassegrain OTA
Mount: SkyWatcher EQ6-R Pro

Controller: ZWO ASIAIR Pro
Main Camera: ZWO ASI533MC Pro at -10C
Filter: ZWO UV/IR cut filter
Focuser: ZWO EAF
Guide Camera: ZWO ASI174MM Mini guidecam
Guide via: ZWO OAG

Stacked from:
Lights 25 at 180 seconds, gain 101, temp -10C
Darks 30 at 180 seconds, gain 101, temp -10C
Flat 30 at 430ms, gain 101, temp -10C
Dark Flat 30 at 430ms gain 101 temp -10C

Bortle 4 sky.
Integrated the saved frames in Astro Pixel Processor.
Processed in PixInsight
Added captions in Photoshop CS4

Caldwell 7, NGC2403 by drdavies07

© drdavies07, all rights reserved.

Caldwell 7, NGC2403

Captured on 9 March as an LRGB image in rather poor conditions with a gibbous moon and hazy sky.

Quattro 10-inch newt plus Paracorr. 5 x 5 min each of LRGB

Reprocessed using my current tools, June 2023.

NGC 2403 by sberkley123

© sberkley123, all rights reserved.

NGC 2403

NGC 2403 (Caldwell 7) is an intermediate spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardalis. It is an outlying member of the M81 Group, and is approximately 8 million light-years distant. It bears a similarity to M33, being about 50,000 light years in diameter and containing numerous star-forming H II regions. The northern spiral arm connects it to the star forming region NGC 2404. NGC 2403 can be observed using 10×50 binoculars. NGC 2404 is 940 light-years in diameter, making it one of the largest known H II regions. This H II region represents striking similarity with NGC 604 in M33, both in size and location in galaxy.

La galaxie Caldwell 7 by Matrok

© Matrok, all rights reserved.

La galaxie Caldwell 7

La belle galaxie Caldwell 7. Elle fait partie du même groupe que les plus célèbres M81 et M82 (le fameux doublet de Bode) mais comme elle est plus petite et moins brillante les amateurs la cherchent moins souvent. Elle vaut pourtant le détour avec ses nombreuses régions brillantes...
Image réalisée en empilant des clichés de 5 s chacun pris avec une caméra Altaïr GP-Cam au foyer d'un télescope Skywatcher 150/750. Les photos ont été empilées avec Deep Sky Stacker et le traitement final réalisé avec The GIMP.

NGC 2403 in RGBHα by astrothad

© astrothad, all rights reserved.

NGC 2403 in RGBHα

Data taken from two separate imaging sessions - hydrogen alpha data on 2021-01-01 and RGB data on 2021-03-16. This is a smaller spiral galaxy at only 50,000 light years in diameter. That puts its stellar population at about half the diameter of our own Milky Way Galaxy. Most of the recent publications that I have found on NGC 2403 put it at a distance of about 11 million light years away. It is an outlying member of the galaxy group that contains M81 and M82. A Type IIP supernova was observed in this galaxy in 2004.

All data taken from Long Beach, CA with a Celestron Edge HD 925 at f/2.3 with HyperStar. RGB data was taken with an Atik 314L+ color CCD with light pollution filter; Hα data taken with an Atik 414-EX monochrome camera with 7 nm bandpass hydrogen alpha filter. Preprocessing of images in Nebulosity; registration, stacking, channel combination, and processing in PixInsight. Final touches in Photoshop.

If your really want to dive into stellar populations in this galaxy, check out Hubble Space Telescope proposal 10915 - archive.stsci.edu/proposal_search.php?id=10915&missio... You can get a much closer look at stars in this galaxy as well as others in the M81 group.

Caldwell 7 by NASA Hubble

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Caldwell 7

This hazy, steely blue spiral galaxy mottled with pink, flower-like gaseous regions and granular filaments of dark dust is Caldwell 7 (also called NGC 2403). The galaxy’s pinkish, glowing clouds are the energetic birthplaces of stars known as H II regions. In these vast, hot areas of ionized hydrogen, the charged gas can form thousands of stars over a couple million years, with each hot newborn star emitting ultraviolet light, further ionizing the surrounding hydrogen.

Roughly 80,000 light-years across, this galaxy became well known amongst supernova hunters in 2004 after Caldwell 7 produced the brightest supernova seen in over a decade (and one of the brightest ever recorded). Supernova 2004dj had a magnitude of 11.2 at peak brightness, and appears as the bright star-like object in the upper right corner of this Hubble image.

Two bright stars hovering near the top of this view could be confused with supernovae, but they are actually local Milky Way stars, far closer to us than Caldwell 7 is. The galaxy is over 12 million light-years away from Earth and can best be seen in the Northern Hemisphere during the winter months. Southern Hemisphere observers will need to be near the equator to see it and should look for it in the summer. The galaxy can be found with binoculars or a telescope, appearing as an elongated fuzzy patch within the bounds of the constellation Camelopardalis, and is relatively bright at magnitude 8.9.

Though Caldwell 7 is comparable to many galaxies in Charles Messier’s famed catalog of celestial objects, the French astronomer missed it when compiling his list. The galaxy was instead discovered by German-British astronomer William Herschel in 1788.

This image, which captures the core and some of the spiral arms of Caldwell 7, was taken with Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys on August 17, 2004, two weeks after a Japanese amateur astronomer discovered Supernova 2004dj. In addition to this visible-light image, astronomers have used ultraviolet images and spectroscopic observations from Hubble to further investigate how certain types of stars explode and what kinds of chemical elements they eject into space.

Credit: NASA, ESA, A.V. Filippenko (University of California, Berkeley), P. Challis (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics), et al.

For more information about Hubble’s observations of Caldwell 7, see:

hubblesite.org/contents/news-releases/2004/news-2004-23.html

For Hubble's Caldwell catalog website and information on how to find these objects in the night sky, visit:

www.nasa.gov/content/goddard/hubble-s-caldwell-catalog

NGC 2403 by Davide Simonetti

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

NGC 2403

First opportunity to do some imaging this month and the target was the galaxy NGC 2403. Conditions were not ideal and the session was plagued with problems so all but 15 of the frames captured had to be junked leaving only 45 minutes worth of exposure. The main problem was the tripod sinking into very wet ground and so ruining the polar alignment and by the time that was re-done and the target re-aquired the clouds rolled in. Still we managed to get something and although much more exposure would have been nice I quite like the result.

NGC 2403 (also Caldwell 7) is an intermediate spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardalis. NGC 2403 is an outlying member of the M81 Group, and is approximately 8 million light-years distant. It bears a striking similarity to M33, being about 50,000 light years in diameter and containing numerous star-forming H II regions. The northern spiral arm connects it to a Star forming region NGC 2404. NGC 2403 can be observed using 10×50 binoculars [en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_2403].

015 x 180 second exposures at Unity Gain (139) cooled to -20°C
054 x dark frames
030 x flat frames
100 x bias/offset frames
Total integration time = 45 minutes

Captured with APT
Guided with PHD2
Processed in Nebulosity, Fitsworks, and Photoshop

Equipment
Telescope: Sky-Watcher Explorer-150PDS
Mount: Skywatcher EQ5
Guide Scope: Orion 50mm Mini
Guiding Camera: ZWO ASI120MC
Imaging Cameera: ZWO ASI1600MC Pro
Baader Mark-III MPCC Coma Corrector
Light pollution filter

NGC2403 by Peter Goodhew

© Peter Goodhew, all rights reserved.

NGC2403

Galaxy NGC 2403 (also known as Caldwell 7) is an intermediate spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardalis. It is 10 million light-years distant and about 50,000 light-years across.

11 hours 25 mins total integration (34x600s L, 9x300s B, 15x300s G, 17x300s R, 7x1200s Ha). RGB all Bin 2x2

Imaged from Alcalalí, Spain 23/1-15/3/2018.

APM TMB 152 F8 LZOS, 10 Micron GM2000HPS, QSI6120ws8

NGC2403 Galaxy (Caldwell 7) by David Slack Astrophotography

© David Slack Astrophotography, all rights reserved.

NGC2403 Galaxy (Caldwell 7)

A spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardalis, some 10 million light-years distant. 24 x 5 minute exposures of luminance with Skywatcher 130p, SXV-H9 CCD, stacked using 2x drizzle. 7 x 5 minute Ha exposures blended into red channel. Colour added from a previous DSLR effort.

NGC 2403 by Davide Simonetti

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

NGC 2403

NGC 2403 (also Caldwell 7) is an intermediate spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardalis. NGC 2403 is an outlying member of the M81 Group, and is approximately 8 million light-years distant. It bears a striking similarity to M33, being about 50,000 light years in diameter and containing numerous star-forming H II regions. The northern spiral arm connects it to a Star forming region NGC 2404. NGC 2403 can be observed using 10×50 binoculars. [Text source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_2403]

12 x 8 minute exposures at 400 ISO
11 x dark frames
10 x flat frames
21 x bias/offset frames (subtracted from flat frames only)

Captured with APT
Guided with PHD
Processed in Nebulosity and Photoshop

Equipment:
Celestron NexStar 127 SLT
GoTo AltAz mount with homemade wedge
Orion 50mm Mini Guide Scope
ZWO ASI120 MC imaging and guiding camera
Canon 700D DSLR

NGC 2403 by GuardianPhil452

© GuardianPhil452, all rights reserved.

NGC 2403

NGC 2403 Caldwell 7 257 of 272 70 and 75sec subs totaling 5hr 11min integration time on 11/14 and 11/19/2015. Average seeing, above average transparency
Hap Griffin-modded Astrodon UV/IR filtered T2i w/ MPCC
AT8IN on Orion Atlas Pro AZ/EQ G.

See more:

NGC2403_Stackx25_240s_B&W by Felix222pc

© Felix222pc, all rights reserved.

NGC2403_Stackx25_240s_B&W

NGC2403_Stackx25_240s_B&W_Titled by Felix222pc

© Felix222pc, all rights reserved.

NGC2403_Stackx25_240s_B&W_Titled

NGC2403_Stackx25_L240s_RGB60s_20150405_Titled&Stars by Felix222pc

© Felix222pc, all rights reserved.

NGC2403_Stackx25_L240s_RGB60s_20150405_Titled&Stars

Caldwell 7 (NGC 2403) by Craig Jewell Photography

© Craig Jewell Photography, all rights reserved.

Caldwell 7 (NGC 2403)

In 2004, this type-Sc spiral galaxy hosted the brightest supernova seen since SN 1987A. SN 2004dj reached a magnitude 11.2 and could be seen for months. While the SN is no longer apparent, bright pink knots of emission nebulae are.

Canary Islands 2 Wide Field | 27 Mar 11 01:04:50 UTC

This image was captured by me using the real-time online telescopes at slooh.com

Caldwell 7 (NGC 2403) by Craig Jewell Photography

© Craig Jewell Photography, all rights reserved.

Caldwell 7 (NGC 2403)

In 2004, this type-Sc spiral galaxy hosted the brightest supernova seen since SN 1987A. SN 2004dj reached a magnitude 11.2 and could be seen for months. While the SN is no longer apparent, bright pink knots of emission nebulae are.

Canary Islands 2 High Mag | 27 Mar 11 01:04:37 UTC

This image was captured by me using the real-time online telescopes at slooh.com

NGC 2403 (Caldwell 7) by Hypnostar

© Hypnostar, all rights reserved.

NGC 2403 (Caldwell 7)