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Pickering's Triangle in Hα

Pickering's Triangle in Ha

Move your mouse over the image above (on smartphones or tablets: touch it) to get a version with stars removed.
In the image above, north is to the right and east is up.


Pickering's Triangle is part of the northwestern section of the Veil Nebula, a large supernova remnant 1,400 to 2,600 light years distant in the constellation of Cygnus. Surprisingly, even though it is the brightest section of the Veil after the Eastern Veil and Western Veil, it is not in the NGC or IC catalogues. NGC 6979 and NGC 6974 are nearby smaller patches of emission nebulosity to the east. The filamentary segments represent an expanding shell or shock front of the supernova explosion which occured between 5,000 and 8,000 years ago.

Pickering's Triangle, in narrow-band filters, natural colors, which this image is part of.


Exposure Data


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© 2020 Walter Koprolin