NGC 2736, a higher resolution version

 

 

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NGC 2736, also known as the Pencil Nebula or Herschel’s Ray, was discovered by John Herschel in 1835. It is part of the Vela Supernova Remnant (see a wide field image here) and located about 4.5 degrees east of its central bubble. Like most supernova remnants, it is better imaged in narrowband, with Halpha and OIII filters. As usual with this kind of images in this website, the colors have been coded in such a way as to provide “natural” colors, trying to reproduce the nebula’s spectrum. The supernova that gave birth to this nebula, exploded about 12,000 years ago and its shockwave expands at a speed of about 300,000 miles per hour (500,000 km/h).

 

Additional Information

Object

Name(s): NGC 2736. The Pencil Nerbula. Herschel’s Ray

Type: Supernova remnant

RA:  09h 00m 17s

Dec: -45º 56’ 53”

Constellation: Vela

Size (arcmin): 30×7

Magnitude: +12 (uncertain)

Distance: 800 ly

Image

Date: 2024-03-16 to 2024-03-19

Location: Obstech, Río Hurtado, Chile

Size (arcmin): 37×36

Telescope: 24” f/6.5 Reflector

Camera: QHY 461 (11760x8896pix)

Guiding: off-axis guider

Total exposure: 15.5 h (Ha: 6h; OIII: 8h; RGB: 1.5h)

Processing: CCDStack, PixInsight (one process) and Photoshop CC 2024

 

 

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