Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Carina (Car)  ·  Contains:  IC 2599  ·  NGC 3293  ·  NGC 3324
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The star cluster NGC 3293 shining down on Gabriel Mistral., Geoff Healey
The star cluster NGC 3293 shining down on Gabriel Mistral.
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The star cluster NGC 3293 shining down on Gabriel Mistral.

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
The star cluster NGC 3293 shining down on Gabriel Mistral., Geoff Healey
The star cluster NGC 3293 shining down on Gabriel Mistral.
Powered byPixInsight

The star cluster NGC 3293 shining down on Gabriel Mistral.

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Description

NGC 3293 is an open cluster in the Carina constellation. It was discovered by Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille in 1751. It consists of more than 100 stars brighter than 14th magnitude in a 10 arc minute field, the brightest of which are blue supergiants of apparent magnitude 6.5 and 6.7. There is also a 7th magnitude pulsating red supergiant, V361 Carinae. I lies around 8,400 light years from us. To the lower right at a further distance of 9,100 light years is whats famously known as the Gabriel Mistral nebula, names after the Nobel prize winning Chilean writer. It actually consists of 2 components, the open cluster NGC3324 and the emission nebula IC 2599. Courtesy Wiki. More often imaged in narrow band to enhance the emission characteristics of IC 2599 and the Carina nebula in general, I decided to take advantage of the new moon and ignoring my bortle 6 sky and stick to RGB broadband.

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The star cluster NGC 3293 shining down on Gabriel Mistral., Geoff Healey