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- I captured something I can't identify near the Horsehead nebula over two nights. Looking for help identifying it.
As I mentioned in another thread, I'm imaging the Horsehead Nebula right now. On the evenings of 2/5 and 2/6 from suburban Philly between 6:30 and 9:00pm I captured an unknown object/phenomena about a half degree below and to the right of the horsehead (when oriented upright). It is 3 lights in a line, and it appears well-defined in green (2min exposures, f/5.25, scale 1.17 arcsec/pixel), barely in blue and not at all in red (Ha, 4min). At first I thought it was a rogue galaxy (they often appear unexpectedly in astrophotos) but then I realized it's moving. Not steadily, but apparently back-and forth. It's noticeable in a scale of a few minutes, but was still in almost the same spot a day later.
My Starry Night software shows no objects in the area (manmade, comets, asteroids, etc.). My leading theory is a relatively new geosynchronous satellite (body and two solar panels) that has just a bit of north-south drift. Other thoughts:
My Starry Night software shows no objects in the area (manmade, comets, asteroids, etc.). My leading theory is a relatively new geosynchronous satellite (body and two solar panels) that has just a bit of north-south drift. Other thoughts:
- It doesn't seem to be internal since they are point sources of light. That tells me "distant", small objects, not, say, internal reflections.
- The halo doesn't seem to match the star halos. I'm not sure what that could mean (its own cloud around it?).
- I haven't done any math on rates, directions or sizes yet.
- I was hoping other astrophotographers might take a look.
- I'm headed on vaca so I won't be able to analyze my photos more before next week.