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The Great Hercules Globular Cluster

             (Messier 13 - M13)

   The Great Globular cluster in the constellation of Hercules. In distance of 25.000 light-years, with an apparent diameter of 29 minutes and an effective diameter of 150 light years, with an age of 14 million light years. The brightest globular in the northern hemisphere, visible to the naked eye in a dark sky. Easily visible with binoculars. 

 

 

    Aquired by the excellent Astrophotographer Jim Misti is granted to anyone who wants to process. The processing was made by me. 

 

Here are the address of the Jim Misti's site, for anyonewho interested:

 

http://www.mistisoftware.com/Astronomy/index_fits.htm

 

 Frames  :
  Lum  :  14 min, 1 min subs, RGB 7 min each, 1 min subs.

During my involvement in photographing the "deep sky" I missed the accompaniment of music, as my musical experience guides me. So I decided to fill my astrophotos with my music. From September 2016 as a starting point, therefore, together with the Flaming Star Nebula,  I present to You, the ‘Floydish Pulsar I’, as my first musical composition (composition, performance and production by me), always inspired by these images.

Parallel Words ! and Dancing Stars I, complete my first trilogy.

Emjoy !

© 2015 by Theodore Kavourinos, Athens, Greece

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