
| Object Data | |
| Description | The Great Orion Nebula is the most famous nebula in the night sky, and also one of the brightest. Its beauty can be admired through the eyepiece of any size of a scope, even a pair of binoculars will suffice. |
| Constellation | Orion the Hunter |
| Right Ascension | 5h 35m 40s |
| Declination | -5° 27' 53" |
| Magnitude | 4.0 |
| Angular size | 1.5 degrees |
| Distance | 490 parsecs (1,600 light years) |
| Radial Velocity | 32 kilometers per second |
| Image Data | |
| Photographer | Fred Lehman |
| Main Scope | Meade 14" LX200GPS |
| Imaging Scope | Celestron 5" SCT @ f/3.3 (415mm) |
| Guide Camera | Not needed |
| Imaging Camera | Starlight Xpress MX7C |
| Resolution | 780 x 580 @ 4.1 arcseconds per pixel |
| Exposure | Four exposures of 60 seconds each. Aligned, stacked, and processed with AstroArt. The central portion of the nebula around the Trapezium has been deliberately overexposed to reveal subtle structure in the darker surrounding portions of the nebula. |
| Date | December 13, 2003 |
| Location | North shore of Jim Lake in Dupuis Nature Preserve in central South Florida. |