M 27 – Dumbbell Nebula

Dumbbell Nebula

M27 – The Dumbbell Planetary Nebula

A little over 4 years into this hobby I have finally imaged M 27. The RC8, at 1625mm of focal length, allows me to capture the details without cropping the image.

The Dumbbell Nebula is a planetary nebula. It is a nebulosity surrounding a white dwarf in the constellation Vulpecula, at a distance of about 1360 light-years. Messier 27 is bright and, at first, appears a little small. However, large expansions of gas are visible around the nebula in long exposure photos.

The first exposure I took was 120 seconds. It was far too bright and I could see that the core would be overexposed after stacking a lot of images. I’m only using a broadband light pollution filter so I went with 60 second exposures for this project. In all I used 344 exposures captured using APT 4.56.

Like many nearby planetary nebulae, the Dumbbell contains knots. Its central region is marked by a pattern of dark and bright cusped knots and their associated dark tails. The knots vary in appearance from symmetric objects with tails to rather irregular tail-less objects. Similarly to the Helix Nebula, the heads of the knots have bright cusps which are local photoionization fronts.

The stars in the image stand out for me. There are many yellow and red stars, along with a few blues that jump out. Such an interesting part of our sky.

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