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Barnard 118 Bullet holes in a star wall?



 
 
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Old November 26th 16, 04:07 PM
WA0CKY WA0CKY is offline
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Default Barnard 118 Bullet holes in a star wall?

Barnard 118 is a very small but very dark nebula on the edge of the Scutum star cloud one and a third degrees southeast of M11. It is in a very dense part of the Milky Way. The nebula is about the darkest I can recall imaging. With a stretch which results in a background level of about 15 in Photoshop it was zero. I can't recall seeing that before anyplace in the sky. Just to its right (west) is the apparently much smaller Barnard 117A. It had a level of 1 at its core so not quite as dark at Barnard 118 but close. I was in for a surprise when I looked up the sizes of these two. Barnard 118 is listed at 2 minutes in diameter but the "smaller" Barnard 117A is listed at 7 minutes in size. There is a slightly dusty region that extends west about 7 minutes from it but it is very hard to see on this stretched image. The linear FITS showed it but only faintly. Try looking at only the red channel of this image and you'll start to make it out. It runs to a moderately bright blue star toward the edge of the cropped image at 1.5" per pixel.

It is likely that the small dark nebula is really Barnard 117 but I come to grief trying to prove this. SIMBAD puts it about 6.6 minutes north of the small dark nebula. The list of Barnard Nebula most referenced in the net http://www.dvaa.org/AData/Barnard.html puts it 2.75 degrees north. I find nothing at either position on the POSS plates. The Astronomical League has a listing of Barnard objects and puts it 2 minutes north of the small nebula. At this point I gave up trying to figure this out. My best guess is that it is the dark part of the small nebula with the faint extension west being Barnard 117a. Jim Thomms has better luck figuring these dark nebulae out than I do so maybe he knows what I'm missing. Adding to the confusion I'll just mention SIMBAD lists LDN 508 and 509 at the exact same coordinates 6.6 minutes north of the small nebula but says 509 is Barnard 117 but 508 isn't. Time to break out the Jack Daniels and hope there's plenty in the bottle.

14" LX 200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RGB=2x10', STL-11000XM, Paramount

Rick
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  #2  
Old December 2nd 16, 08:50 PM
slilge slilge is offline
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Wow, that's amazing.
Such holes in the sky are rare indeed. I guess there are not many dark nebulae this small.
Must put them on my list...

Stefan
 




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