Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Boötes (Boo)  ·  Contains:  PGC 2415662  ·  PGC 2417826  ·  PGC 84554  ·  PK085+52.1
Jacoby-1 Planetary Nebula, Jerry Macon
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Jacoby-1 Planetary Nebula

Jacoby-1 Planetary Nebula, Jerry Macon
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Jacoby-1 Planetary Nebula

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Description

Images from the following two scopes (piggybacked) contributed to this image:

AG12+ASI1600MM at .70 asec/pix (OIII)

TV127is+ASI183MM at .75 asec/pix. (LRGB + OIII)

They were all registered to the best OIII image taken on the AG12.

Jacoby-1 is one of the faintest planetary nebulae. The Ha component is very small so I have only imaged OIII, with LRGB stars captured with the TV127is.

A planetary nebula forms when a star can no longer support itself by fusion reactions in its center. The gravity from the material in the outer part of the star takes its inevitable toll on the structure of the star, and forces the inner parts to condense and heat up. The high temperature central regions drive the outer half of the star away in a brisk stellar wind, lasting a few thousand years. When the process is complete, the remaining core remnant is uncovered and heats the now distant gases and causes them to glow.

Why "Planetary" Nebula?

Despite the name, these objects are totally unrelated to "planets". It is commonly thought that they may represent the final episode of the Sun's existence as a star. This concept has been questioned recently by Jacoby, Fullton, Morse, Kwitter and Henry ( 1997) and Bond (2001) - wherein evidence from globular cluster stars indicates that stars must be about 20% heavier than the Sun to form a PN. It is estimated that there are about 10,000 planetary nebulae in our galaxy, so they are a relatively common, although short-lived phase (about 25,000 years) of the stellar life cycle.

(www.noao.edu)

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Jacoby-1 Planetary Nebula, Jerry Macon

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Planetary Nebulae