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Sh2-279 Nebulae
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Object:
Sh2-279,NGC1977, Running Man Nebula in Orion
Notes:

Sh2-279 (alternatively designated S279 or Sharpless 279) is an HII region and bright nebulae that includes a reflection nebula located in the constellation Orion.

Crop of the central part here

It is the northernmost part of the asterism known as Orion's Sword, lying 0.6° north of the Orion Nebula.

The reflection nebula embedded in Sh2-279 is popularly known as the Running Man Nebula. Sh2-279 comprises three NGC nebulae, NGC 1973, NGC 1975, and NGC 1977 that are divided by darker nebulous regions. It also includes the open cluster NGC 1981.

The brightest nebulosity, later listed as NGC 1977, was discovered by William Herschel in 1786. He catalogued it as "H V 30" and described "!! 42 Orionis and neb[ula]". The two smaller reflection nebulae were first noted by French astronomer Heinrich Louis d'Arrest, NGC 1973 in 1862 and NGC 1975 in 1864.[5] All three were included in the New General Catalogue in 1888.[6] The designation NGC 1977 is used in various sources for the reflection area around 42 Orionis (the south-east portion of the reflection nebula), for the entire reflection nebula (including NGC 1973 and NGC 1975), or for the whole nebula complex.

This whole region in Orion's Sword was also later catalogued as Orion 1c. In 1966, van den Bergh distinguished the weak clustering of reflection nebula that includes Sh2-279 as Ori R2. Every reflection nebulae appearing within the Sharpless catalogue were first identified on blue plates of the Palomar Sky Survey, and then double checked against the red plates to eliminate possible plate faults. Van den Berg found that there was a strong concentration of new T Tauri stars around the Orion Nebula, tapering off into a tail approaching Sh2-279.

The Running Man Nebula is a popular target for amateur astrophotographers, as it lies close to the Orion Nebula and has many nearby guide stars. The outline of the running man shows up primarily in photographs; it is difficult to perceive visually through telescopes, though the reflection nebula itself is visible in small to medium apertures in dark skies.

Date:
November 2017
Location:
El Sauce Observatory, Río Hurtado, Chile
Telescope:
Corrected Newtonian astrograph, 12" f/3.8
Mount:

Astro-Physics AP1100GTO

Camera:
SBIG STL 1100@ -25°C.
Exposure Time:
L:R:G:B=360:225:225:225mins
 
 
       
 
Astrofotografia Austral | Copyright Jose Joaquin Perez 2010