The Pleiades

Messier 45 • Taurus

The Pleiades
1. Widefield view of the Seven Sisters
The Pleiades
2. Detail of the Maia Nebula
The Pleiades
3. Detail of the Maia Nebula

A Cosmic Chance Encounter

Messier 45, the Pleiades, is perhaps the most famous open star cluster in the night sky. Long-exposure photography reveals a secret: the stars are currently sailing through a ghost-like cloud of interstellar dust. This is a reflection nebula. Unlike emission gas which glows by its own light, this dust simply mirrors the intense light of the nearby stars. The distinct "striations" or parallel lines seen in the nebulosity are caused by the interaction of the dust with the local galactic magnetic field.

Imaging Challenges

  • • Star Halos: Managing reflections from the extremely bright primary stars is a constant battle during processing.
  • • Subtle Dust: Pulling out the deep Merope and Maia nebulosity requires long integration to overcome noise.
  • • Framing: At 110 arcminutes, M45 is massive; capturing the outer "dust curtains" requires a wide field of view
"Traveling at 40 kilometers per second, the Pleiades are passing through a dusty region of space by sheer coincidence."

Astro Data

Distance 444 Light Years
Object Type Open Cluster
Constellation Taurus

Acquisition

Telescope Askar FRA400 | TPO 180 Ultra Wide
Camera Artemis-M Pro
Integration 6.5 Hours
Integration LRGB Broadband Hours
m44.html Cluster
double-cluster.html Cluster

Bring the Cosmos Home

The The Pleiades offers a unique and complex aesthetic for any modern collection.

All images are available as limited edition, museum-quality fine art prints...

Inquire About Prints