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Imaged by Martin S. Ferlito copyright
Gstar-EX Integrating Video Camera LRGB
8" SCmidt-Cassegrain on Vixen GP Mount, Stepper Driven.
Information provided by seds.org
Discovered by Charles Messier in 1764.
The Dumbbell Nebula Messier 27
(M27, NGC 6853) is perhaps the finest
planetary nebula in the sky, and was the first planetary nebula ever
discovered.
On July 12, 1764, Charles Messier discovered this new and
fascinating class
of objects, and describes this one as an oval nebula without stars. The
name
"Dumb-bell" goes back to the description by John Herschel, who also
compared it to a "double-headed shot."
We happen to see this one
approximately from its equatorial plane (approx.
left-to-right in our image); this is similar to our view of another,
fainter
Messier planetary nebula, M76, which is called the Little Dumbbell. From
near
one pole, it would probably have the shape of a ring, and perhaps look
like we
view the Ring Nebula M57.
As measured by Soviet astronomer O.N.
Chudowitchera from Pulkowo (and
mentioned by L.H. Aller, Glyn Jones and Vehrenberg), the bright portion
of the
nebula is apparently expanding at a rate of 6.8 arc seconds per century,
leading to an estimated age of 3,000 to 4,000 years, i.e. the shell
ejection
probably would have been observable this time ago (it actually happened
earlier
as the light had to travel all the distance of perhaps about 1000 light
years).
She estimated the distance somewhat short at only about 490 ly. Another
estimate, given by Burnham, has obtained a rate 1.0 arc seconds per
century,
and an estimated age of 48,000 years.
The central star of M27
is quite bright at mag 13.5,
and an extremely hot blueish subdwarf dwarf at about 85,000 K (so the
spectral
type is given as O7 in the Sky Catalog 2000). K.M. Cudworth of the
Yerkes
Observatory found that it probably has a faint (mag 17) yellow companion
at
6.5" in position angle 214 deg (Burnham).