Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Gemini (Gem)  ·  Contains:  10 Gem  ·  11 Gem  ·  12 Gem  ·  7 eta Gem  ·  8 Gem  ·  9 Gem  ·  Gem A  ·  Gemini  ·  IC 443  ·  IC 444  ·  LBN 840  ·  LBN 841  ·  LBN 844  ·  LDN 1564  ·  LDN 1565  ·  LDN 1566  ·  Sh2-248  ·  Sh2-249  ·  Tejat Prior  ·  The star Propus (ηGem)
Sh2-248 / Sh2-249 / IC 443 Jellyfish Nebula SHO, Jerry Macon
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Sh2-248 / Sh2-249 / IC 443 Jellyfish Nebula SHO

Sh2-248 / Sh2-249 / IC 443 Jellyfish Nebula SHO, Jerry Macon
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Sh2-248 / Sh2-249 / IC 443 Jellyfish Nebula SHO

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Description

IC 443 (also known as the Jellyfish Nebula and Sharpless 248 is a galactic supernova remnant (SNR) in the constellation Gemini. On the plane of the sky, it is located near the star Eta Geminorum. Its distance is roughly 5,000 light years from Earth.

IC 443 may be the remains of a supernova that occurred 3,000 - 30,000 years ago. The same supernova event likely created the neutron star CXOU J061705.3+222127, the collapsed remnant of the stellar core. IC 443 is one of the best-studied cases of supernova remnants interacting with surrounding molecular clouds.
IC 443 is an extended source, having an angular diameter of 50 arcmin (by comparison, the full moon is 30 arcmin across). At the estimated distance of 5,000 ly (1,500 parsec) from Earth, it corresponds to a physical size of roughly 70 light years (20 parsec).

The SNR optical and radio morphology is shell-like (e.g. a prototypical shell-like SNR is SN 1006), consisting of two connected sub-shells with different centers and radii. A third, larger sub-shell—initially attributed to IC 443—is now recognized as a different and older (100,000 years) SNR, called G189.6+3.3.
Notably, IC 443 X-ray morphology is centrally peaked and a very soft X-ray shell is barely visible. Unlike plerion remnants, e.g. the Crab Nebula, the inner X-ray emission is not dominated by the central pulsar wind nebula. It has indeed a thermal origin. IC 443 shows very similar features to the class of mixed morphology SNRs. Both optical and X-ray emission are heavily absorbed by a giant molecular cloud in the foreground, crossing the whole remnant body from northwest to southeast.

The remnant's age is still uncertain. There is some agreement that the progenitor supernova happened between 3,000 and 30,000 years ago. Recent Chandra and XMM-Newton observations identified a plerion nebula, close to the remnant southern rim. The point source near the apex of the nebula is a neutron star, relic of a SN explosion. The location in a star forming region and the presence of a neutron star favor a Type II supernova, the ultimate fate of a massive star, as the progenitor explosion.

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Sharpless 2 Objects

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Sh2-248 / Sh2-249 / IC 443 Jellyfish Nebula SHO, Jerry Macon

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Sharpless 2 Objects