New Image of CED 90 - The Cosmic Companion Newsletter
A new look at the CED 90 nebula, at the tip of the wing of the Seagull Nebula
Hello everyone:
Can you believe that it is February already? I sure hope you enjoyed this week’s episode - Our Future on the Moon: Apollo to Artemis with Andy Saunders!
Here’s a new look at CED 90 - a reflection/emission nebula at the tip of the right wing of the Seagull Nebula in Canis Major. This gaseous structure encompasses a cluster of at least five stars exciting the gas around them to glow.
Also known as Sharpless 297 (Sh2-297), this cloud of gas and dust sits roughly 4,000 light years from Earth. Light in this image left this nebula around the same time the final wooly mammoths met their demise, coal was first burned for fuel, and some clever person invented the abacus.
Recorded on the night of 7 December, using the 0.6-meter CHI-1 telescope in Chile, available from Telescope Live. This composite image is composed from six 10-minute exposures, recorded in wavelengths showing hydrogen (red), sulfur (green) and oxygen (blue).
VIP subscribers see the full image below without a watermark - you KNOW you want it for your wallpaper (computer or kitchen? That is up to you!).
Join us for our next episode - Our Future on Mars w/ James Burk - executive director of The Mars Society!
Clear skies!
James
Educators get 25% off subscriptions with any .edu email address? Are you an educator without a .edu address? Feel free to contact us after class!
Keep reading with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to AI Creator House to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.