
My latest image of Messier 64, the famous Black Eye Galaxy in Coma Berenices, located ~17 million light-years away.
What makes M64 particularly fascinating is that its outer gas disk rotates in the opposite direction of the inner region—likely evidence of a past merger with a smaller galaxy.
This final image combines data from two different imaging systems:
High-Resolution RGB:
• PlaneWave CDK17 (17" f/6.8)
• ZWO ASI6200MM
• 7.2h RGB
Deep L/Ha/RGB Support:
• Star Instruments RC10C (10" f/7.3)
• QSI 660 WSG8
• L: 8.9h
• R: 3.0h
• G: 3.0h
• B: 3.0h
• Ha: 8.0h
Total Integration: 33+ hours
Location: Fregenal de la Sierra, Spain
Processed in PixInsight / Photoshop
by kbarth001

1 Comment
It’s a nice photo and it’s nice to see the dust that makes the black eye effect especially the detail around the core. Why leave the rest of the galaxy white?