Astrophotography by Torsten Mueller


NGC2359

Thors Helmet
Emission Nebula
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Object Information

Description From Wikipedia: "NGC 2359 (also known as Thor's Helmet) is an emission nebula[3] in the constellation Canis Major. The nebula is approximately 3,670 parsecs (11.96 thousand light years) away and 30 light-years in size. The central star is the Wolf-Rayet star WR7, an extremely hot star thought to be in a brief pre-supernova stage of evolution. It is similar in nature to the Bubble Nebula, but interactions with a nearby large molecular cloud are thought to have contributed to the more complex shape and curved bow-shock structure of Thor's Helmet. It is also catalogued as Sharpless 2-298 and Gum 4.[4] The nebula has an overall bubble shape, but with complex filamentary structures. The nebula contains several hundred solar masses of ionised material, plus several thousand more of unionised gas. It is largely interstellar material swept up by winds from the central star, although some material does appear to be enriched with the products of fusion and is likely to come directly from the star.[5] The expansion rate of different portions of the nebula varies from 10 km/s to at least 30 km/s, leading to age estimates of 78,500 - 236,000 years. The nebula has been studied at radio and x-ray wavelengths, but it is still unclear whether it was produced at the class O main sequence stage of development, as a red supergiant, luminous blue variable, or mainly as a Wolf-Rayet star.[2] NGC 2361 is a bright knot of nebulosity on one edge of the central ring of NGC 2359."
Type Emission Nebula
Brightness 11.45 mag (vis)
Apparent Size 10' x 5'
Distance 0.015 MLy

Exposure Information

Date 2019-02-26
Location GRT (Goldbach Remote Telescope)
Optics GSO 12" RC f/8
Camera Canon EOS1200Da
Integration 13 x 180 sec (ISO1600) CLS Filter
(0.65 h total)