Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Cygnus (Cyg)  ·  Contains:  IC 1340  ·  NGC 6960  ·  NGC 6979  ·  NGC 6992  ·  NGC 6995  ·  The star 52 Cyg  ·  Veil Nebula
Veil Nebula Explosion in Cygnus., awilliams
Veil Nebula Explosion in Cygnus.
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Veil Nebula Explosion in Cygnus., awilliams
Veil Nebula Explosion in Cygnus.
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Description

The veil nebula in Cygnus is the remanence of a supernova explosion over 10,000 years ago. During the supernova most of stellar material is ejected at supersonic speeds creating a shockwave that heats up and ionises the surrounding gases. This creates the stunning nebula that we see today.

What we see now is just a snap shot of this huge explosion which is still expanding at 1.5 million kilometres per hour. The nebula is a favourite of astrophotographers since it is so bright and large. It can be photographed in a number of ways with different equipment and looks great as individual segments or close up details in ‘true' colour or a narrowband combination. For me I love images of the entire complex showing how the shockwave has spread out from a central point. To do this I need to capture a two panel mosaic which I did using NINA which made planning the framing and sequencing both panels very easy.

I wanted the image to convey the explosive nature of this object in the end I settled on a OSH narrow band combination and used starnet to mix a starless image with the original to make the stars seem part of the explosion.

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Veil Nebula Explosion in Cygnus., awilliams