Author Topic: NGC 2736 - the Pencil Nebula aka Herschel's Ray  (Read 1214 times)

Offline RickS

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NGC 2736 - the Pencil Nebula aka Herschel's Ray
« on: 2018 April 08 03:21:40 »
NGC 2736, aka the Pencil Nebula or Herschel's Ray, is a small section of the Vela Supernova Remnant approximately 800 light-years from Earth in the Southern constellation of Vela. It glows brightly due to ionised Hydrogen (red) and Oxygen (blue/green) where the shock wave from the supernova has ploughed into interstellar gas clouds. The original, violent death of the star which went supernova took place approximately 11,000 years ago.

Data captured by Martin Pugh with his CDK17 at Yass. Process by yours truly with PixInsight 1.8.5.

Scope: Planewave CDK17 @ f/6.8 = 2939mm FL
Mount: Paramount ME
Camera: SBIG STXL-11002/AOX
Filters: Astrodon LRGB gen II, 3nm NB
Image scale: 0.63 arcsec/pixel
Exposures: 3x600s R, 3x600s G, 3x600s B, 14x1800s Ha, 14x1800s Oiii (15.5 hours)


Offline Ignacio

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Re: NGC 2736 - the Pencil Nebula aka Herschel's Ray
« Reply #1 on: 2018 April 08 10:30:40 »
Fantastic, Rick! The best I've seen of this object.

Ignacio

Offline RickS

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Re: NGC 2736 - the Pencil Nebula aka Herschel's Ray
« Reply #2 on: 2018 April 08 13:53:25 »
Thank you, Ignacio!