The constellation of Taurus is known to contain a lot of major objects like its brightest star Aldebaran, the Pleiades, the Hyades, the Crab Nebula (M1), etc.
What is less known (or known to a more “specialized” audience), is that the same constellation is chock-full of dark nebulae stranding much of its area. This dark nebula complex is known as the Taurus Molecular Cloud. IC 2087 is a small (barely 4 arcminutes in diameter) bright reflection nebula in the northwestern part of the constellation, embedded in a “sea” of dark nebulae, the most prominent of which is Barnard 22. IC 2087 is a bright whitish smudge, which contrasts with the pitch-dark nebula background.
I imaged this nebula complex on two nights between November and December 2024 from Saint Barthelemy in Valle d’Aosta (Italy), where I also met a group of longtime friends and fellow amateur astronomers.
The image below was taken through a Pentax 75 SDHF OTA with an ASI 2600MM CMOS camera and an Optolong LRGB filter set. Exposure times (LRGB) were 915:90:90:95 minutes (a total of 1190 minutes, or about 20 hours) in 5-minute subs. An ASIAir mini PC was used for acquisition, and an ASI 178MC color camera was used for guiding.
Beautiful image. I recently saw an IR image obtained by the Webb telescope of a protostar system forming in this region and wondered what it looked like in visible light. Love your image and I see that the protostar is hidden behind that dark dust.
Hi Steve thank you for your kind words! Would you care to provide some more info on the position of that propostar?
Thank you, Emmanuele