Overview
The Orion Nebula, also known as M42, is a a star factory. Located 1400 light-years from Earth, it’s the closest region of intense star formation to us.

Background
This was a really tricky target for a number of reasons. First, the nebula is only during a narrow window of opportunity from my garden, as it passes my house’s chimney but before it reaches the shed roof. That’s a few hours at most per night. Also, the weather was awful and I was clouded out almost all the time. Then worst of all, my camera fan broke! I had to order a new fan and then install it before I could continue. All in all, a bit of a disastrous six weeks.
Despite that, I managed just over 11 hours using my Optolong L-Ultimate. I then collected almost two hours of RGB data (by simply removing the filter). My plan was to use this RGB data just for the stars. However, I found that despite the short integration time, M43 — the smaller nebula to the right of the image — showed up well. This is probably due to the fact that it’s part reflection nebula, so shows up better in broadband wavelengths compared to the larger hydrogen-rich M42 nebula that dominates the picture. So, I followed a simple tutorial and combined my L-Ultimate and RGB data into a single image. I was happy with how well that turned out.
As for the stars, I just couldn’t get them looking as good in RGB as the L-Ultimate data. I even tried shooting shorter subframes for RGB — 30 seconds, instead of my standard 120 — but it didn’t seem to make any noticeable difference overall. So, the stars are actually from the L-Ultimate data. There wasn’t much colour in the RGB version, so no big loss there.
Imaging details
Date | January – March 2023 (six weeks) |
Location | Bristol, UK (Bortle 8) |
Telescope | Askar 130PHQ Flatfield Astrograph |
Camera | ZWO ASI 2600MC-PRO |
Mount | Sky-Watcher EQ6-R PRO |
Guide | William Optics 50mm Guidescope with 1.25″ RotoLock; ZWO ASI 120MM Mini |
Control | ASIAIR Plus |
Software | PixInsight, Lightroom |
Filters | – Optolong L-Ultimate (Ha / OIII): 337 x 120 seconds (11 hours 14 mins) – No filter: 212 x 30 seconds (1 hour 46 mins) |
Total exposure time | 13 hours |
Image credit | Lee Pullen |
Processing
The Orion Nebula is notoriously difficult to process and in the end I spent the best part of two days playing about with different techniques and settings. The bright core in particular often causes people issues as it’s so bright compared to the rest of the nebula. To overcome this, I took the image into Adobe Lightroom fairly early in my processing and tamed the highlights to return detail to the core. The Trapezium stars are even visible, if you look closely. Much simpler than taking different exposures!
While writing this up, I’ve realised it’s almost exactly two years since I took my previous Orion Nebula photo. More details below, but here’s a quick slider comparison. Good progression I reckon!


Source data




Previous version
I first imaged the Orion Nebula back in February 2021, using my wide-field Askar FRA400 telescope.

* February 2021
* Bristol, UK (Bortle 8)
* Telescope: Askar FRA400 f/5.6 Quintuplet APO Astrograph
* Camera: ZWO ASI 2600MC-PRO
* Filter: Optolong L-eXtreme
* Mount: Orion Sirius EQ-G
* Guide: William Optics 32mm; ZWO ASI 120MM Mini
* Control: ASIAIR PRO
* Software: PixInsight and Lightroom
* 89 x 300 seconds
Total integration time: 7 hours 25 minutes
By Lee Pullen
Seestar S50
Here’s the Orion Nebula taken from a city centre using a Seestar S50.

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Spectacular as always Lee! Let me buy you a beer just for sharing this art!
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