Nov 22, 2024

NGC 7635 The Bubble Nebula (RGB data from 2012)

NGC7635 also called "Bubble Nebula" (Sharpless 162, Caldwell 11) is an emission nebula in the constellation Cassiopeia with a very particular "bubble" shape. It is 6 to 10 light years in size, and it was, created by the stellar wind from a central star (SAO 20575, BD+60 2522)lRead more


Oct 19, 2024

C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS

After several attempts frustrated by clouds, on 18/10/2024, I had the opportunity to take some images of comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS from my observatory in Àger.

The first image is focused on detail and is taken with Takahashi TOA-150 and STL-11000M camera: 29 x 30 seconds of Luminance plus 11 x 20 seconds of R, G and B (those taken with FSQ-106N)Read more

Oct 13, 2024

IC 5146: The Cocoon nebula

IC 5146 The Cocoon nebula (also known as Caldwell 19, Sh2-125 and Barnard 168) is a nebula in the constellation Cygnus. 

Its distance from us varies according to the sources consulted, ranging from 2500 to 4000 light-years. This beautiful nebula is nearly 15 light-years wideRead more

Oct 12, 2024

October 2024: Aurora Borealis again in Àger!

On Thursday 10 October 2024 we had the opportunity to see a new aurora borealis in Àger, 42º north latitude, for the second time in the year!!

The first episode was on 10 May this year. The first image is an unprocessed capture ,…Read more


Sep 18, 2024

M 76 the Little Dumbbell Nebula

Messier 76  (also known as M76, the Little Dumbbell Nebula or NGC650/651) is a planetary nebula in the constellation Perseus. 

This nebula was discovered by the French astronomer Pierre Méchain in 1780, and was included in the Charles Messier's catalogue of comet-like objects as number 76 as a double nebula without stars (for this reason, it was also catalogued as ,…Read more


Sep 17, 2024

New exoplanet transit: HAT-P-16b

HAT-P-16b is a gas giant exoplanet orbiting HAT-P-16, an F- type star with an apparent magnitude of 10.9 and a size close to that of our Sun (Mass = 1.22 Msun, Radius = 1.24 Rsun).

Located in the constellation Andromeda, it is 739 light-years away from us and takes only 2.8 days to complete one orbit around its star. Its discovery was announced in 2010. 

Its mass is 4.19 times that of Jupiter, and the distance to its star is 0.0413 AU.

Transit taken remotely on 14/09/2024 (with Moon at 85%) with TOA-150 telescope and STL-11000M camera (110 120-second exposures). 


More information about exoplanets and other transits here.

Sep 4, 2024

LBN 251

This image shows a very crowded area in Cygnus. At the centre of the image is LBN 251, whose core is bluish due to a high concentration of ionized oxygen. 

The field shown in the first image (North is up) reveals many other nebulae such as LDN 892, LDN 891, LDN 894,…Read more