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Welcome to the Universe in Motion! In this video I try to find and photograph the Heart Nebula and the Soul Nebula in the night sky around the constellation of Cassiopeia, using a specially modified camera. Please share this video! I hope you enjoy - please click on the like button if you do, and consider subscribing to see more videos like these. This is the second in a series of videos and the third one will be out next week. Want to see the first episode? Click here: • Photographing hidden nebulae in the night sky Please check out my other videos, and if you want to know more about the night sky and what you can see each month, check out my monthly blog for the UK Space Agency: https://space.blog.gov.uk/category/as... I'd love to link up with you on social media - come and find me at: Twitter: / universemotion Instagram: / the_universe_in_motion Facebook: / 100070029378354 Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/1927701... #astronomy #astrophotography #space #nebula #photography #dslr #heart #soul #cassiopeia A quick note on the star names in the video – with many different translations from different origins and languages, I’m aware that some of the stars are spelt differently, for example, ‘Schedar’ sometimes goes by ‘Shedir’, or ‘Shedar’. Some of the stars even go by completely different names. Gamma Cassiopeia was used by American astronauts as a navigational guide, and is often called ‘Navi’, after American astronaut Virgil Ivan Grissom called it that (a reversal of his middle name) on his star charts when preparing for missions. After he died in the tragic events of Apollo 1, subsequent Apollo astronauts continued to use the name, and it has been widely adopted ever since. Finally, on the vlogging – sorry for the windy audio and me being a complete shadow! I won’t be able to correct these for next week’s video, but hopefully in the one after that you’ll be able to see / hear me properly!