Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Aquarius (Aqr)  ·  Contains:  HD212980  ·  HD213056  ·  HD213069  ·  HD213070  ·  Helix Nebula  ·  NGC 7293

Image of the day 10/19/2023

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The Helix Halo, Mathew Ludgate
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The Helix Halo

Image of the day 10/19/2023

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
The Helix Halo, Mathew Ludgate
Powered byPixInsight

The Helix Halo

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Description

Located 655 lightyears away in Aquarius is the famous Helix nebula.  The Helix nebula is one of the most extensively studied and imaged planetary nebula, and has a number of very interesting structures, including small central cometary knots, large-scale emission arcs, and a bipolar outflow causing bow-shaped filaments and shocks.

When planning this project, I came across a paper by Zhang et al discussing a possible halo around the Helix nebula. On Galex UV images, they detected a very faint possible NE jet, a SW bow shaped filament and a diffuse Southern Halo. I decided to take a deep image of the Helix to see if I could detect these infrequently seen features in Ha emission. I had also noticed on some images, faint OIII emission occurring around the NE and SW arc’s and wanted to see if I could clearly define this OIII emission.

Zhang_Halo.png
© Zhang et al, The Astrophysical Journal

Data was captured with my Nikon 400mm f/2.8 including all of the nebulosity data seen here, but I did add some of the brighter stars from some data I had from my APM LZOS refractor.  I used drizzle integration, and the outer faint halo was processed using continuum subtraction and carefully masked to not blow out the brighter inner ring.

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The Helix Halo, Mathew Ludgate