NGC 7293 (PK 36-5.1) Planetary Nebula in Aquarius
Located at: RA 22 hours 29 minutes 38 seconds, Dec -20 degrees 50 minutes 12 seconds
Size: 16'; Magnitude: 7.5 photographic; Class: 4+3
North is up

West to the right
| Telescope: |
8" f5 Newtonian reflector |
| Camera: |
ST-8XME, self-guided, binned 1x1, temp -15c, camera control MaxIm DL 4.56 |
| Image: |
Lumicon Deep Sky filter, 300 minutes (30 x 10 minute subs), 10/8/10/2007 |
| Processing: |
CCDStack 1.3, Photoshop 7.0 |
| Location: |
Rolling Roof Observatory, Thousand Oaks, CA 91360 (+34d 13m 29s -118h 52m 20s) |
| Notes: |
The 'Helix', or 'Helical Nebula', is one of the largest and closest planetary nebula in our sky. See here for a 14.5" f5 Newtonian hypered Tech Pan 2415 image. From the NGC / IC Project: Contemporary Visual Observation(s) for NGC 7293 NGC 7293 = PK 36-57.1 = Helical or Helix Nebula = PN G036.1-57.1 22 29 38.5 -20 50 13 V = 7.6; Size 880"x720" 17.5" (10/2/99): gorgeous view at 100x and OIII filter. This huge, annular PN is 15'x12' in size and slightly elongated E-W due to an extension on the W side. The thick annulus is mottled and irregular with brighter regions along the N, NE and SW edge. The W side is slightly weaker but very faint extensions from the N and S side towards the W, cause the rim to bulge on this side. The west edge of the halo more gradually blends into the background near a mag 11.5 star off the W side. At 220x without a filter about a dozen stars are superimposed. The mag 13.5 star is easy along with a similar star a couple of arcmin following. 13" (8/1/82): the "Helix" nebula is extremely large, about 15' diameter, clearly annular. Significant contrast gain with OIII filter permits observation even from the Bay Area. The fairly bright rim is nonuniform appearing brighter along the N side. About seven stars are superimposed including the mag 13.5 central star. Appears best at low power due to size and relative low surface brightness. Description from 8/15/82 and 8/5/83. 8": huge annular planetary is fairly bright at low power using a Daystar 300 filter. The rim has an irregular surface brightness. - by Steve Gottlieb |