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NGC_6974_final, Stephen Duffy

NGC_6974_final

NGC_6974_final, Stephen Duffy

NGC_6974_final

Description

NGC 6974 is a large region of nebulosity in the constellation Cygnus, called the Cygnus Loop, a remnant of an old supernova. This portion of the loop is called Pickering's Triangle. Parts of the nebula appear to be rope-like filaments. The standard explanation is that the shock waves are so thin that the gas bubble is visible only when viewed exactly edge-on, giving the shell the appearance of a filament. At the estimated distance of 2400 light-years, the nebula has a diameter of 130 light-years. The thickness of each filament is 1/50,000th of the radius, or about 4 billion miles, roughly the distance from Earth to Pluto. Undulations in the surface of the shell lead to multiple filamentary images, which appear to be intertwined. Pickering's Triangle was discovered photographically in 1904 by Williamina Fleming (after the New General Catalogue was published), but credit went to Edward Charles Pickering, the director of her observatory, as was the custom of the day. Text from Wikipedia

Taken from Likely, CA July 2019

Mount: Paramount MYT Scope: TEC140 Camera: QSI683

L: R: G: B: H: O = 5.5h: 2h: 2h: 2h: 3h: 3h

Comments

Histogram

NGC_6974_final, Stephen Duffy