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An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO, David Payne
An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO, David Payne

An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO, David Payne
An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO, David Payne

An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description

Televue 127is;  AP Mach2 GTO  ASI6200MM, - Baader RGB & 6.5nm NB CMOS opt. filters
H,S,O – (26,15x16 600s, Bin 1, Gain 100)
R,G,B – (12,9,9 x 180x Bin 1, Gain 100)
Total integration time = 11.0 hrs

My interest in protoplanetary nebulae sparked a potential interest in using a large aperture telescope to image the Egg Nebula in Cygnus.   While going through the sky atlas in Nina to find it, I came across an interesting large emission nebula (including LBN 146, 166, 269, and 250) instead and decided to shoot that with my wider field refractor.

I couldn’t find a common name for the emission nebula , so I dubbed it the A-frame as it is composed of three “linear like” features in that shape.  It interested me because it is quite filamentary in parts – much like the more popular Sh2-113/114 Flying Dragons in Cygnus.  These filamentary parts almost look like they should be part of an SNR.  The other odd thing, is just like the Flying Dragons, the signal is much stronger in Ha and S, than O.  While there is obviously some ionizing UV in the area to energize the emissions, I imagine it isn’t strong enough to ionize much oxygen (or the oxygen is either too dense for the forbidden emission line, or absent).  To be honest though, this subject does deserve additional integration time - I ended up throwing away a lot of subs due to clouds and haze.

When processing the subs, I wanted to see if I could “find” the original target that led me here – The Egg Nebula.  The Hubble image of this cool object is here, but of course it is much smaller in this image.  The multi-coloured egg shells can’t be seen, but the two lobes (similar to the lobes of Minkowski’s Footprint – another small protoplanetary) and the central star blocking dust can be made out.   If you have trouble finding it you can mouseover/move to to the starless image (it is supposed to be an egg hunt after all).  You will have to zoom in to see what details there are once you find it.   In these images, the Egg appears in NB, but the RGB version is also interesting.  At least I can say I captured it with my 5 inch refractor!

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  • Final
    An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO, David Payne
    Original
  • An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO, David Payne
    B

B

Title: Starless version with the Egg Nebula

Description: I am not keen on starless images, but I am including this one to help with the egg hunt. Note that it appears like an elongated double-star, and with a truck load of imagination, an egg.

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An Egg Hunt – The A-frame Emission Nebula around the Egg Nebula in SHO, David Payne