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The Pleiades Star Cluster is a famous and stunning deep-sky photography target for any astrophotographer. The Seven Sisters, also known as Messier 45, can easily be seen with the naked eye if you know where to look. Photographing it is also very easy, but there is one major challenge: capturing the amazing blue nebulosity that surrounds these stars.
In this post, I will show you how to capture this astrophotography target and give you some indication of how you can expect your photos to turn out as you progress in this hobby. There is no substitute for experience, but my aim here is to show you my results and help you capture better photos by learning from my mistakes.
About the Pleiades Star Cluster, M 45
Astronomical Data
The Pleiades, also known as M45, is an open star cluster located in the constellation Taurus. It contains over 1,000 stars, including several bright blue stars that are visible to the naked eye. The cluster is relatively young, with an estimated age of 100 million years, and is located approximately 440 light years away from Earth1. It is one of the nearest and brightest deep sky objects, making it a popular target for amateur and professional astronomers alike.
Although the age of the Pleiades cluster is given as 100 million years, it could be as young as 75 or as old as 150 million years2. The brightest of the blue stars in this star cluster have a short life of only about 100 million years.
A quarter of the stars in the Pleiades3.
The Pleiades is composed predominantly of young, hot blue stars that are only about 100 million years old. These stars are primarily of spectral types B and A, indicating that they are significantly hotter and more massive than the Sun. The most prominent stars in the cluster shine brightly with high luminosity, making them easily visible to the naked eye.
What Causes the Nebulosity of the Pleiades?
The nebulosity, or hazy, cloudy appearance of the stars in the Pleiades star cluster, is caused by the reflection of light from nearby interstellar dust. This dust reflects the light from the stars themselves, which appears to us as a blue colour. This is a characteristic of the stars. The reflection nebulosity is caused by4 within the star cluster.
The dust particles are made of silicates and are very small, around 0.1 microns in size. This small size scatters the light in all directions, and this effect is seen as the nebulosity around the stars of the cluster.
In astronomy, there are two main types of nebulae, reflection, and emission. The Pleiades is a reflection nebula. This is important for astrophotographers because using the wrong filter to photograph Messier 45 can cut out some of the light we are trying to capture. For reflection nebula, broadband filters such as the one I have, Ioptron’s L-Pro, can be used, but many claim that these will block out some of this nebulosity.
Most nebulae are emission nebulae5 and emit a high proportion of hydrogen alpha, which often appears red in our images. For these, we can use narrowband or broadband filters.
The Pleiades is an open star cluster, meaning that it is not held together by a strong gravitational force. The stars stay together because of their similar motion relative to other celestial objects.
We can see the Pleiades with the naked eye because it is quite close to our planet, one of the closest of all the star clusters we know of. Incidentally Galileo was first to see the star cluster through a telescope.
Historical Significance
Pleiades has been observed throughout history by a number of different civilisations. It has been used as a navigational tool and also to mark time as it rises during late summer and autumn and moves across the sky through the winter until it can no longer be seen in the northern hemisphere.
Astronomers have studied Pleiades over the centuries. For example, Michael Maestlin, the mentor of Johannes Kepler, recorded 11 stars in the cluster before the telescope was invented. The study of Pleiades has advanced the development of astronomy6.
Cultural Significance
The Pleiades cluster has had major global cultural importance throughout history.
The Pleiades star names include Sterope, Merope, Electra, Maia, Taygete, Celaeno, and Alcyone, which were names of nymphs in Greek Mythology7. These nymphs were said to be seven sisters transformed into stars by Zeus to escape the pursuit of Orion.
The cluster is also associated with several Native American legends8, including stories from the Cherokee and Navajo people.
In Japan, the Pleiades are known as “Subaru,” which means “unite” or “cluster,” and the star cluster is the emblem of the Subaru automobile brand.
Ancient Egyptians saw the Pleiades as a symbol of agricultural cycles, while the Māori of New Zealand mark the cluster’s heliacal rising as the start of the New Year in the celebration of Matariki.
The star cluster has been associated with various festivals and rituals, such as the ancient Druid rite that coincided with the midnight culmination of the Pleiades, which is believed to have influenced the modern-day festival of Halloween9
Pleiades in the Bible:
This object has been mentioned in the Bible several times. (See Job 9:1 – 12 where it describes God as the creator of Pleiades. Another mention is in Amos 5:8 and in Revelation 1:20 the seven stars are symbolic of the seven churches. In all, the Pleiades are mentioned or indirectly referred to seven times.
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- fitted with achromatic glass for good edge-to-edge viewing
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When to Image the Pleiades
If you’re interested in capturing the beauty of the Pleiades for yourself, it’s best to observe the cluster during the winter months when it is high in the sky. There are two ways to photograph this deep sky object, either with a DSLR with a wide-field or telephoto lens or with a telescope and camera.
I notice that where I am in the Northern Hemisphere, I start to see the Pleiades come up above the horizon from about September 1 quite late in the evening, say after eleven O’clock or so, and then it gradually rises earlier. By January, Pleiades is well into the higher elevations of the sky, and the advantage here is that we can image it right up in the darkest part of the sky, including as it moves through the zenith.
In the Southern Hemisphere, the Pleiades can best be seen during the summer months.
Personally, Pleiades is one of my favourite targets that I return to each year, and with better skill at imaging, processing of images, and better equipment, I seem to do better as each year passes. Maybe one day I will be satisfied with my results!
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How Did Pleiades Get Its Name?
Have you wondered about this interesting name? I have. Well, it apparently comes from the Greeks, although there are different theories as to exactly how it got this name. Probably the most well-known theory is that the Greeks named the Seven Stars the Seven Sisters because Atlas and Pleione had seven daughters, and the stars are named after these daughters.
In Greek Mythology, Zeus changed the daughters into the form of stars, and so their names have been given to each of the seven major stars, (Alcyone, Electra, Maia, Merope, Taygete, Celaeno, and Sterope).
Also, ancient sailors used Pleiades as a navigational tool, and the name “to sail” in Greek was used (plein). Astronomers have used the term Pleiades ever since.
This amazing star cluster can also look great as part of a composition in landscape astrophotography.
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Astrophotography Tips
Before I show you what images I have obtained of the Pleiades so far, I’d like to offer a few tips on how best to image this target.
First, as with most deep sky targets, the longer the exposure time, the better for capturing faint nebulosity. However, as I have discovered and as you can see in the images below, the stars of the Pleiades are extremely bright and will easily be overexposed if you take long exposures.
In my attempts, once I started using an equatorial mount, I found I could take long exposures of two or three minutes without significant star trails ,so my images were taken with 2-minute exposures. This was my limit with my mount, the Ioptron CEM 26, without guiding.
Here’s a guide on how to choose a telescope mount so that you can image deep sky objects at longer exposures.
Even this appears to have overexposed the stars, so in the future, I think I would reduce this to 90 or even 60 seconds and get more images. You need to figure out how long your exposures will need to be for your light pollution, equipment, and so on.
To capture the nebulosity properly, try either a broadband light pollution filter or, if you want to get the best results, try no filter and reduce your exposure time. Take at least a few hours of total integration time.
To photograph the Pleiades, a camera with manual settings and a tripod are required. A fast lens, ideally with a wide aperture of f/2.8 or lower, is also recommended to capture as much light as possible. I used a Samyang 135mm, which meets these criteria, and got reasonably good results.
To get a good image, try to avoid too much light pollution. I have imaged it under Bortle 5, 4, and 3 skies and have managed to avoid any light pollution near the star cluster. You also want to avoid a bright Moon because that will impact the contrast in your image and remove your ability to see the nebulosity.
Good luck with your attempts! I’d love to know what success you get photographing the Pleiades.
My Photographs of The Pleiades Star Cluster
Here are some examples of the astrophotos I’ve taken over the last couple of years, and I hope you can see how, in astrophotography, experience, knowledge, and testing along the way lead to improved results. I hope to add another image or two to this as I am still trying to fully capture the amazing blue nebulosity around the Pleiades star cluster (M 45).
Imaging details:
Here are the exposure details of the images I have taken of the Pleiades (M 45), above:
Image 1
- Taken with the alt-az mount of the Celestron 130slt. L-Pro Ioptron filter. Processed in Siril. The field of view was 650mm.
- The number of exposures: 58
- Length of each exposure: 60 seconds.
- Total integration time: 58 minutes.
Image 2
- Taken with an Ioptron CEM 26 equatorial mount using a Canon 600D modified DSLR with a Samyang 135mm lens. This produced a wide-field shot of the Pleiades Cluster.
- L-Pro Ioptron filter.
- The number of exposures: 29
- Length of each exposure: 120 seconds.
- Total integration time: 58 minutes.
Image 3
- Taken with an Ioptron CEM 26 equatorial mount and a Celestron 130 SLT telescope. The camera used was the ZWO ASI533 MC PRO, which has a smaller field of view than image 1.
- The number of exposures: 97
- Length of each exposure: 180 seconds.
- Total integration time: 5 hours.
Image 4
- Taken with an Ioptron CEM 26 equatorial mount and a Celestron 130 SLT telescope. The camera used was a Canon 600D Astro-modified DSLR attached directly to the focuser of the telescope.
- The number of exposures: 200
- Length of each exposure: 180 seconds.
- Total integration time: 10 hours.
Conclusions:
Image 3 was taken with a more sensitive dedicated astro camera and not a DSLR as in Image 1. The equatorial mount has made a huge difference to the quality of the image also, making the stars and the details much sharper.
Image 3 also really benefits from guiding. In the third image, we can see much more nebulosity in the Pleiades, M 45.
The third image also has a much longer integration, which makes it less noisy and more detailed.
Image 4 has twice as much integration as Image 3, however, it was also taken a year earlier than Image 3. Image 4 was taken with my Canon DSLR, whereas Image 3 was taken with the ZWO ASI533 MC PRO. The dedicated astrocamera, therefore, greatly improved the image.
Check out my post about how different cameras can affect your astrophotography and whether you need a special camera to get better pictures.
Next time I image this target, I hope to capture even more of the nebulosity by removing the filter and reducing the exposure time to compensate for the added light pollution that may enter the camera. We’ll see if that will enable me to capture all the glory of the Seven Sister’s blue nebulosity. Here’s hoping!
The Pleiades is a must-photograph astrophotography target, but it is not easy to photograph well. Have a go and keep trying, and one day you’ll capture it in all its beauty. Remember what they say, aim for the stars!
References
- HubbleSite. Hubble Refines Distance to Pleiades Star Cluster. https://hubblesite.org/contents/news-releases/2004/news-2004-20.html
- Constellation Guide. Pleiades: The Seven Sisters (Messier 45). https://www.constellation-guide.com/pleiades-the-seven-sisters-messier-45/
- Study.com The Pleiades Star Cluster | Location, Mythology & Facts. https://study.com/academy/lesson/pleiades-star-cluster-location-mythology-facts.html
- HubbleSite. Ghostly Reflections in the Pleiades. https://study.com/academy/lesson/pleiades-star-cluster-location-mythology-facts.html
- Universe Guide. What is an Emission Nebula? https://www.universeguide.com/fact/emissionnebula
- Bruce McClure. Earthsky.org. The Pleiades – or 7 Sisters – known around the world. https://earthsky.org/favorite-star-patterns/pleiades-star-cluster-enjoys-worldwide-renown/
- Wikipedia. Pleiades (Greek mythology). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiades_(Greek_mythology)
- Three Rivers Park District. Star Gazing and the Seven Sisters. https://www.threeriversparks.org/blog/star-gazing-and-seven-sisters
- Earthsky.org. Halloween is an astronomy holiday. It’s a cross-quarter day. https://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/halloween-derived-from-ancient-celtic-cross-quarter-day/