Astrophotographer captures a cosmic lagoon glowing 5,200 light-years from Earth (photo)

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Astrophotographer captures a cosmic lagoon glowing 5,200 light-years from Earth (photo)

The Lagoon Nebula photographed glowing in the constellation Sagittarius. (Image credit: Noah Gyles) Amateur astrophotographer Noah Gyles has shared a stunningly detailed view of the Lagoon Nebula, …

The Lagoon Nebula photographed glowing in the constellation Sagittarius. (Image credit: Noah Gyles) Amateur astrophotographer Noah Gyles has shared a stunningly detailed view of the Lagoon Nebula, captured as it glowed 5,200 light-years from Earth in the skies above Rockwell, Texas. Gyles' colorful image reveals intricate detail in the vast interstellar cloud of dust and hydrogen gas, which has been ionized by the intense ultraviolet radiation from the population of hot, young stars embedded within the nebula, causing it to glow with its own light. "I live in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, so I often drive about an hour outside the city to escape the light pollution," Gyles told Space.com in an email. "Since I wait for nights that are both moonless and cloudless, I don't get nearly as many chances to image as I'd like, but It never gets old seeing a camera reveal nebulae and galaxies in parts of the sky that look completely empty to the naked eye." Gyles captured 60x5-minute exposures of the Lagoon Nebula on the nights of July 18 and 19 2025 using an Askar FRA500 telescope and ZWO astronomy camera, in conjunction with a set of narrowband astronomy filters. "This was one of the first targets I chose after upgrading my equipment," explained Gyles. …

Original source: Space.com

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