Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Canis Major (CMa)  ·  Contains:  IC 468  ·  NGC 2359  ·  Sh2-298
NGC 2359 Thor's Helmet, Jerry Macon
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NGC 2359 Thor's Helmet

NGC 2359 Thor's Helmet, Jerry Macon
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NGC 2359 Thor's Helmet

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

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

TV127is+ASI183MM at .75 asec/pix. (L)

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

Using L from the TV NP127is refractor effectively eliminates the spikes from the AG12.

Captured on the nights of 2019/2/1, 2019/2/2, 2019/2/7, 2019/2/8.

This is one of many older sets of data that I never got around to processing. Trying to catch up.

Thor’s Helmet is an emission nebula located in the southern constellation Canis Major. Its designation in the New General Catalogue is NGC2359. The nebula is 30 light years in size and lies at a distance of 11,960 light years from Earth. It was named Thor’s Helmet because its bubble shape and filaments resemble the depictions of the Norse god’s helmet.

The nebula is located about 8 degrees to the northeast of Sirius, the brightest star in the sky. The central star of Thor’s Helmet is the Wolf-Rayet star WR 7 (HD 56925, HIP 35 378). WR 7 is a large, bright star located near the centre of the helmet. The star is believed to be about 280,000 times brighter than the Sun, 16 times more massive and 1.41 times larger. It has a surface temperature of 112,000 K and is about 20 million years old.

Wolf-Rayet stars are evolved, extremely hot and luminous stars in the last stage of their life, that are rapidly losing mass as a result of a strong, high-speed stellar wind. The speed of WR 7’s stellar wind is estimated at 1,545 km/s. The star will end its life as a brilliant supernova in the relatively near future.

Thor’s Helmet was formed as a result of WR 7 expelling its outer layers. The overall helmet shape is a result of interaction of the expanding bubble of expelled material with giant molecular clouds in the area. The ionising radiation of WR 7 is responsible for the nebula’s glow, visible in wavelengths from radio to X-ray.

Different parts of Thor’s Helmet are expanding at different rates, estimated to be from 10 km/s to 30 km/s or more. The different rates of expansion put the estimates of the nebula’s age in the range between 78,500 and 236,000 years.

Thor’s Helmet can be seen in 6-inch or smaller telescopes, but it only appears as a fuzzy patch in smaller instruments. A 10-inch telescope will show some of the arcs extending away from the nebula’s central region.

(constellation-guide.com)

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NGC 2359 Thor's Helmet, Jerry Macon

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Sharpless 2 Objects