Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Cygnus (Cyg)

Image of the day 03/01/2023

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NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus, Marcel Drechsler
NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus
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NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus

Image of the day 03/01/2023

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus, Marcel Drechsler
NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus
Powered byPixInsight

NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus

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FOUR DISCOVERIES IN ONE IMAGE

With this international collaboration, our team has made four discoveries at once.
Starting with the discovery of the largest object in the image field - Strottner-Drechsler 161 - the team has begun a systematic investigation of the extreme north of the constellation Cygnus - a region that amateurs have so far rarely, or even never, visited because it was considered "empty" space.
This remarkable teamwork shows that the contrary is the case.

The team: Marcel Drechsler, Xavier Strottner, Andreas Zirke, Peter Goodhew, Sven Eklund

widefield-3.jpg
(c) Andreas Zirke, Marcel Drechsler

Image above: All four discoveries are within a radius of just over one degree in the night sky.
Such a dense occurrence of possible (and confirmed) planetary nebulae is extremely rare.



widefield-4.jpg
(c) Andreas Zirke, Marcel Drechsler

EkGo1.jpg
(c) Andreas Zirke, Marcel Drechsler

the two images above: Further north of StDr 161 is another object - EkGo 1.
This nebula was included in the new Eklund-Goodhew catalogue, named after the two astrophotographers and called EkGo1. It is a candidate for a planetary nebula.

https://planetarynebulae.net/FR/page_np.php?id=1078
http://202.189.117.101:8999/gpne/objectInfoPage.php?id=33554




StDr161-detail.jpg
(c) Peter Goodhew, Sven Eklund, Marcel Drechsler

The main object in the photo is undoubtedly Strottner-Drechsler 161, a candidate for a possible planetary nebula.
The very deep exposures show parallel filaments in [OIII] and H-alpha. According to Professor Quentin Parker, an astrophysicist at the University of Hong Kong, this object is interesting because it is possible that the particular stripe structure of this nebula is the result of the dispersion of Alfvén waves. An Alfvén wave in a plasma is a low-frequency oscillation of the ions and the magnetic field.
Faint radio signals are also potentially detectable, and the faint arc-like structure is possibly associated with the mid-infrared in the WISE space telescope images. A source in the ultraviolet also reveals a possible CSPN (Central Stars of Planetary Nebulae). It could be an ionised ISM, but the exact nature of this object is still unknown. A spectrum is needed to clarify this question.

Strottner-Drechsler 161
Discoverers: Xavier Strottner, Marcel Drechsler
Designation: StDr 161 / PN-G: 088.1+06.7
Coordinates: 20:33:22.73 +51:22:02.37 (J2000)
Constellation: Cygnus
Angular size: 10 x 5 arcminutes

https://planetarynebulae.net/FR/page_np.php?id=1077
http://202.189.117.101:8999/gpne/objectInfoPage.php?id=33553




widefield 2.jpg
(c) Andreas Zirke, Marcel Drechsler

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  • Final
    NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus, Marcel Drechsler
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    NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus, Marcel Drechsler
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NEW DISCOVERY: Strottner-Drechsler 161 and EkGo 1 in Cygnus, Marcel Drechsler