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Designations:
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NGC 1499 - California Nebula
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Object Type:
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Constellation:
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Perseus
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02 hr 22 min 36.0 sec (2000.0)
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+42° 21' 00" (2000.0)
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10.0
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Size:
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2½° X ¾°
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Distance:
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~2000 light years
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Discoverer:
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E. E. Barnard on November 3, 1885
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The California Nebula (NGC 1499) is a vast cloud of glowing hydrogen
(plus trace amounts of other gases) about 2½° long and ¾° wide. It was discovered
visually by E. E. Barnard on November 3, 1885, while he was using the 6-inch refractor at Vanderbilt
University in Nashville, Tennessee. It is known as the California Nebula because its shape, recorded
on long-exposure photographs is similar to that of the western state. NGC 1499 has a surface brightness
which is less than that of M33. So conventional wisdom has long held that the surface brightness of the
California Nebula is too low to be seen against the background sky in any telescope. Of course, the fact
that Barnard discovered the nebula visually seems to have been long forgotten.
This "stately" nebula resides some 1000 light years away towards the outer (Orion) arm of our galaxy. The glowing portion of the nebula is around 100 light years in extent. However, this entire region is filled with galactic gas from which many massive and luminous stars have formed. This family of young and bright stars in this spiral arm of our galaxy is called the Perseus OB2 association. The bright star to the right of the nebula in this image is Zeta Persei. It is both a member of the Perseus OB2 group and it is probably responsible to making the California Nebula glow. This nebula is a well-known example of one that not only glows strongly due to H-Alpha emission- but also H-beta. The emission of photons by the Hydrogen atoms in this gas are caused by the elevation and subsequent drop in energy level of electrons. The electrons gain energy by collision and (most importantly in this case) by interacting with energetic photons (coming from Zeta Persei). The larger the "fall" or number of energy levels an electron drops to, the more energetic the photon that is released. In this case H-Alpha photons are released when an electron falls one level (from n3 to n2 with a wavelength of 6563 angstroms). H-beta photons are released when the electron falls two levels (from n4 to n2 with a wavelength of 4861 angstroms). In most nebulae, the conditions for electrons to fall one level (H-Alpha) are easier to have- so most nebulae are not strong emitters in H-beta. In addition to this nebula, the Horsehead nebula is another well-known example that is a good H-Beta emitter. |
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Telescope:
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Focal Length:
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384 mm (480mm with 0.8x reducer)
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Mount:
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Camera
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Guider:
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Exposures:
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9 15-Minute Hydrogen-Alpha (Luminance.) 10 4-Minute exposures for each color (red, green and blue)
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Location:
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Cicero, IN
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Software:
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CCDSoft for image acquisition, processed with CCDStack and Photoshop CS2
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