NGC6960 Western Veil Nebula

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NGC6960 Western Veil Nebula

NGC 6960, also known as the Western Veil Nebula, the Witch's Broom Nebula, and Sharpless 103, is the remnant from a supernova which occurred about 10,000 years ago. It is the counterpart to the Eastern Veil Nebula, NGC 6992. Its amazing filamentary structure is thought to be due to compression of expanding shells of gas as they meet the resistance of the interstellar medium. However, the shells are so thin that, with few exceptions, we see them only where viewed exactly edge-on. The fact that much of what we see as "empty" space is filled with dark dust is evidenced by the fact that more background stars are visible below the nebula than above it. This is because the shock wave has swept the area below the nebula clear of the dust, allowing more background stars to shine through. The bright star, 52 Cygni, is a type K star and is actually a foreground object with no physically association with the nebula. .

 

Object

NGC6960 Western Veil Nebula
Constellation: Cygnus
Position: RA 20h 45m · DEC +30° 43
Apparent Size: 60 arcmin
Apparent Magnitude:  
Distance in light years: 2100 ly
   
Photo Data  
Date of Expose: 26.10.2019
Location:

Knottenried/Oberallgäu/Germany (1002m ASL)
GPS: 47°36’13“ N / 10°11’24“ E
Telescope: TS 14" RC f/d 8.0 / 2845mm
Camera: Sony A7Ra mod @ T sensor = +14.0°C
Field of View: 0.72 x 0.48 deg
Pixel Scale/Resolution: 0.35 arcsec/px
Expose frames/times: OSC RAW 21x90s, 18 darks, ISO 3200
Total expose: 31min 30s
Filter: no
Mount: HPS 10Micron GM 3000
   
Software: DSS 3.3.4, Photoshop CC
Remarks:  

© Photos by Peter Cerveny
© Object description/intro text fully or partially by Wikipedia,
    which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License 

 
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