View Full Version : What is this Object?
Jimi Lowrey
October 10th, 2012, 06:11 PM
Does anyone have any information on this object in Andromeda? Simbad list it as ZOAG G136.85-1322 Galaxy. It sure looks like a PN to me?
RA
02 12 27
Dec
+47 27 10
314
Steve Gottlieb
October 11th, 2012, 05:06 AM
You're probably right, Jimi. I put your coordinates into VizieR (http://vizier.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/VizieR) with a search radius of 1 arcminute. Near the bottom of the page is an entry from Brian Skiff's "Catalogue of Stellar Spectral Classifications" (2009-2012). The ZOAG object is listed as a mag 18.5V planetary with a reference to Mattias Kronberger, so I'm guessing he flagged it as a possible planetary. I have no clue whether there's been any follow-up but a post on the DeepSkyHunters group may yield some more information.
Uwe Glahn
October 11th, 2012, 09:25 PM
Jimi,
funny post for me :D - first thought of mine "cool looking object - I have to try this". Than my brain started to work :confused: and I took a look in my observation book.
Two years ago (July 8, 2010) Matthias Kronberger and I made the first observation of this object with my 27". The object was discovered from Matthias and logged as possible PN candidate. As far as I know the object is approved as a real PN and is now called "Kronberger 60". (for sure Matthias can tell us more about)
With 27" and 172x + [OIII] the PN could be hold easily with averted vision. With 419x both lobes could be detected, the N lobe a little bit brighter. We could not see the CS.
sketch: 27", 419x, [OIII], NELM 7m+ (http://www.deepsky-visuell.de/Zeichnungen/Kn.htm)
315
Jimi Lowrey
October 12th, 2012, 04:18 AM
Uwe,
I have also observed this object but was wondering if there has been any new research done to prove it was a PN?
I ask about it on AMASTRO and this is what Brian Skiff had to say about it,
The nice bi-polar structure, very blue central star, and weak
IRAS 25mu detection all point to a planetary nebula. The central
star is in the SDSS DR8 catalogue at V mag 19.4, and precise coords:
2 12 27.84 +47 27 10.1 (J2000). There are no recent studies linked
either in SIMBAD or VizieR, though that doesn't mean something is
not in the works.
I hope Matthias will jump in here he probably knows if any research has been done on it.
mkronber
October 12th, 2012, 05:45 PM
Hi Jimi, Uwe,
as already mentioned on amastro today - yep, it's likely a PN; "only" likely since a confirmatory spectrum is still missing.
As Uwe wrote already, the object could be held easily with averted vision in the 27", so I guess that a considerably smaller aperture (16"+) might do the job as well. Personally, I do not remember if the UHC or the [OIII] filter worked better on that one, but Uwe might know.
BTW Uwe - it's Kn 58 , not Kn 60; Kn 60 is this one: 07 00 06.7 +12 14 40 ...
CS,
Matthias
Jimi Lowrey
October 28th, 2012, 08:20 PM
I observed this object again last week and found it to be fairly easy,it was direct vision at 375X with the north lobe brighter. I tried the NPB filter at 488X and got a good response also tried OIII filter but it darked the field to much. Best view that night was with the NPB at 488X it really helped the South lobe of this nebula. I am sure that this is some kind of emission nebula or PN from the response that I had to the nebula filters.
Others should try for it I would like to hear reports on this object.
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