Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Ursa Major (UMa)  ·  Contains:  PK158+37.1
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Abell 28 Long Exposures, Jerry Yesavage
Abell 28 Long Exposures, Jerry Yesavage

Abell 28 Long Exposures

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
Abell 28 Long Exposures, Jerry Yesavage
Abell 28 Long Exposures, Jerry Yesavage

Abell 28 Long Exposures

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description

Long exposure (11h) on this in my efforts to finalizing the field flattening of my ASI 6200.  I thought this would just be the dull disk, but with all the exposures there seemed to be some extension to the left of the PN.  I guess this is either a PN moving fast L to R or some type of solar wing coming R to L... but I do not see any stars there. 

Prior Image with the CCD for 15h:

Abell 28 RGB Hydrogen Alpha


There seems to be little information on this object other than it is dull and 5.5 ARC' in diameter.

GENERAL NOTE ON ABELL (and other) PLANETARY NEBULA>>>>>>>>>>>>>

From Wikipedia:

The Abell Catalog of Planetary Nebulae was created in 1966 by George O. Abell and was composed of 86 entries thought to be planetary nebulae that were collected from discoveries, about half by Albert George Wilson and the rest by Abell, Robert George Harrington, and Rudolph Minkowski. All were discovered before August 1955 as part of the National Geographic Society – Palomar Observatory Sky Survey on photographic plates created with the 48-inch (1.2 m) Samuel Oschin telescope at Mount Palomar. Four were later rejected as not being planetaries: Abell 11 (reflection nebula), Abell 32 (red plate flaw), Abell 76 (ring galaxy PGC 85185), and Abell 85 (supernova remnant CTB 1 and noted as possibly such in Abell's 1966 paper). Another three were also not included in the Strasbourg-ESO Catalogue of Galactic Planetary Nebulae (SEC): Abell 9, Abell 17 (red plate flaw), and Abell 64. Planetaries on the list are best viewed with a large aperture telescope (e.g. 18-inch (0.46 m)) and an OIII filter.

It turns out to my surprise most of these are visible with my Stellarvue 130mm (5-inch) SVX.

Bottom line there are 79 imagable Abell Nebula of which I have imaged them all.

This is the Astrobin Abell PN Group

This is my collection:

Planetary Nebula (Abell)

These are sorted by number and behind the Abell's are other miscellaneous PNs that I have imaged... I have a list of the 100 brightest.

This is Jerry Macon's outstanding Abell Collection:

Jerry Macon's Abell Collection

These are some useful Abell relevant sites:

Color and IMHO Best Filter Information

Images by Season and More Filter information in German

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