Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Cepheus (Cep)  ·  Contains:  B161  ·  IC 1396  ·  LBN 451  ·  LBN 452  ·  LBN 455  ·  LDN 1093  ·  LDN 1098  ·  LDN 1099  ·  LDN 1105  ·  LDN 1110  ·  LDN 1111  ·  Sh2-131  ·  VdB142
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Elephant Trunk IC1396A, Mau_Bard
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Elephant Trunk IC1396A

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
Elephant Trunk IC1396A, Mau_Bard
Powered byPixInsight

Elephant Trunk IC1396A

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Description

Exposures were taken on 6 August and 25 September with an OSC camera and a dual narrow-band filter in H-alpha and OIII. I had to discard additional full night sub-exposures as the SNR was far worse than the one obtained in the other two nights, probably due to thin clouds, but I am not 100% clear about what caused that.
The observatory was placed in city backyard with heavily polluted sky.

Here follows the target description from Wikipedia, I only add that the length of the trunk is thought to be about 20 ly.

"The Elephant's Trunk Nebula is a concentration of interstellar gas and dust within the much larger ionized gas region IC 1396 located in the constellation Cepheus about 2,400 light years away from Earth. The piece of the nebula shown here is the dark, dense globule IC 1396A; it is commonly called the Elephant's Trunk nebula because of its appearance at visible light wavelengths, where there is a dark patch with a bright, sinuous rim. The bright rim is the surface of the dense cloud that is being illuminated and ionized by a very bright, massive star (HD 206267) that is just to the east of IC 1396A. (...) The entire IC 1396 region is ionized by the massive star, except for dense globules that can protect themselves from the star's harsh ultraviolet rays.

The Elephant's Trunk Nebula is now thought to be a site of star formation, containing several very young (less than 100,000 yr) stars that were discovered in infrared images in 2003. Two older (but still young, a couple of million years, by the standards of stars, which live for billions of years) stars are present in a small, circular cavity in the head of the globule. Winds from these young stars may have emptied the cavity.

The combined action of the light from the massive star ionizing and compressing the rim of the cloud, and the wind from the young stars shifting gas from the center outward lead to very high compression in the Elephant's Trunk Nebula. This pressure has triggered the current generation of protostars."

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  • Final
    Elephant Trunk IC1396A, Mau_Bard
    Original
  • Elephant Trunk IC1396A, Mau_Bard
    B

B

Description: v2, H-alfa as luminance and PI EZ-denoise

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Elephant Trunk IC1396A, Mau_Bard