Emission nebula | |
---|---|
Planetary nebula | |
Observation data: J2000 epoch | |
Right ascension | 05h 42m 06.19056s[2] |
Declination | +09° 05′ 10.5843″[2] |
Distance | 8.21 kly (2.518 kpc)[3] ly |
Apparent magnitude (V) | 11.6[4] |
Apparent dimensions (V) | 28″[4] |
Constellation | Orion |
Physical characteristics | |
Radius | 0.326 ± 0.039 ly[5] ly |
Notable features | Double-shell |
Designations | PK 196-10 1, IRAS 05393+0903[6] |
NGC 2022 is a planetary nebula in the equatorial constellation of Orion, located at a distance of 8.21 kilolight-years from the Sun.[3] It was first observed by William Herschel on December 28, 1785, who described it as: considerably bright, nearly round, like a star with a large diameter, like an ill-defined planetary nebula.[7] In medium-sized amateur telescopes it looks like a small grayish patch of light. It is not very bright but it is still easy to spot it in the eyepiece. Even in a telescope as small as 80mm it can just be seen using a narrowband filter such as an OIII filter as a 'fuzzy' star. The object has the shape of a prolate spheroid with a major to minor axis ratio of 1.2,[4] an apparent size of 28″, and a halo extending out to 40″, which is about the angular diameter of Jupiter as seen from Earth.[8]
This is a double-shell planetary nebula with a wind-compressed inner shell and a more nebulous second shell.[9] The linear radius of the inner shell is estimated at 0.326 ± 0.039 ly. It is expanding with a velocity of 28±2 km/s. The second shell is nearly circular and is expanding more slowly than the inner.[5] The mass of the ionized elements in the planetary nebula is 0.19 M☉, or 19% of the Sun's mass.[5] A faint outer halo consists of the remains of material ejected during the central star's asymptotic giant branch stage.[10]
NGC 2022 lies 11° away from the Galactic Plane, which position suggests it was formed from a low-mass star. The elemental abundances are similar to those in the Sun, although carbon is about 50% higher and sulfur is a factor of two lower.[8] The central star of this nebula has a visual magnitude of 15.92, a temperature of 122,000 K, and is radiating 852 times the luminosity of the Sun from a photosphere that has only 6.55% of the Sun's radius.[8]
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