Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread: Observation of IRAS 17436+5003 / PN G0.77.1+30.8, a post-AGB (PPNe) object

  1. #1
    Member
    Join Date
    May 2022
    Location
    Bangalore, India
    Posts
    3

    Observation of IRAS 17436+5003 / PN G0.77.1+30.8, a post-AGB (PPNe) object

    Hello all,

    In my recent visit to Hanle (a Bortle 1 location in Ladakh, North India), a cold dry dessert at an elevation of 4300m, (32°47'N 78°58'E ), I tried to observe this Proto Planetary Nebulae in the constellation Hercules (about 1.8° of Eltanin in Draco).

    From my voice notes
    Located it in the 17mm Baader Hyperion (~90x) eyepiece, looked like a bluish star. Flanked by 2 stars of similar brightness forming an almost equilateral triangle with the object. Needed to go much higher in magnification.
    Properly observed with 6.5mm ES eyepiece + 2x Barlow (460x). Did try with 10mm Super Plossl (150x), 6.5mm EP (230x). 230x started showing some nebulosity.
    A definite bigger halo, almost circular in shape, was observed. Compared to the halo of nearby two (pretty close to each other) stars, this halo was larger & definitive. Nearby dimmer stars resolved into pinpoint sources too.

    As it was a manual scope (with no tracking), I had great difficulty in maintaining the object in the FoV. After 15-20min of struggle, could keep for 20-30s in the FoV to observe properly.

    Two accompanying friends (visual observers) confirmed elongation between 1-7O clock positions (in the FoV). However I couldn't observe elongation consistently.

    Equipment used : 12" Skywatcher Dobsonian 300mm Flextube Collapsible, manual.
    Conditions: Bortle 1 (pristine conditions I have ever observed).
    Observation on 30th Sept 2024, 8pm - 10pm.

    Other designations: V814 Her, HD 161796 Simbad query here.

    P.S. As I was browsing through Stellarium for objects, usual grid search of 1.5° x 1.5° in Stellarium, found this & noted it down for observation (months before). Interestingly enough, did remember to observe it on the trip too.

    Would love to hear from the community on your observations on the same object. Upon research, understood that this is an unique class of object that I have gotten to observe & conditions/friends helped.

    Regards
    Sudhash
    Last edited by sudhashn; October 17th, 2024 at 08:02 AM.

  2. #2
    Member Clear Skies's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    the Netherlands
    Posts
    319
    Hi Sudhash,

    I took a look at the information you sent and I can not identify an extended, non-stellar object at the position of V814 Herculis. I am quite confident you observed a halo brought upon your optics by that mag. 7.3 star.

    Cheers,


    Victor
    Victor van Wulfen

    clearskies.eu | Clear Skies Observing Guides #CSOG | Blog | Observing Log | Observing Sessions

    - SQM is nothing. Transparency is everything.

  3. #3
    Member Steve Gottlieb's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Northern California
    Posts
    835
    Here's an HST image, which shows an irregular dust shell elongated N-S, though scattered light from the bright post-AGB star does seem the most likely cause.

    The Torun catalogue of Galactic post-AGB and related objects has a page on this star here with photometric data and bibliography.
    Last edited by Steve Gottlieb; October 24th, 2024 at 05:25 PM.
    Steve
    24" f/3.7 Starstructure
    14.5" f/4.3 Starmaster
    Adventures in Deep Space
    Contributing Editor, Sky & Telescope

  4. #4
    Member Clear Skies's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    the Netherlands
    Posts
    319
    The problem with this "observation" is unfamiliarity with angular size and the true field of view in an eyepiece. In (visual) astronomy this is as basic a thing as understanding right ascension & declination and cardinal directions.

    As the Hubble images show, the object is a mere 4"x2" in size. In speak, that is four by two seconds of arc. We call planetaries of that size 'stellar'. Also, the image was taken at a wavelength of 100 micrometer: that's near-infrared.

    The image below is a POSS2 Blue DSS image, 1/4 degree = 15' in size (fifteen minuten of arc) = 900" (nine hundred seconds of arc).

    15.jpg

    The size of the object, per near-infrared Hubble image, translated to the DSS image scale is therefor 4/900 x 2/900.

    Please note the little red speck centered on V814 Herculis; I drew an ellipse but on an image scale of 900 pixels, a 4 x 2 pixel ellipse becomes a rectangle. Anyway: that's the angular size of the object "observed". Is that an object that can be observed with a mag. 7 star smack in the middle of it..?

    Finally, please compare this image posted on Cloudy Nights. The arc drawn onto that image is > 1' = > 60" (greater than one minute of arc = greater than 60 seconds of arc) which is well over fifteen times the (long side's) size of the object imaged by Hubble.

    Please, fellow stargazers, do not use Hubble images to plan observations and please, do take the effort to familiarize yourself with the very basics of celestial mechanics, star charts and the gear you use. 'Cause if you skip the basics, you will be forever stuck in them.
    Last edited by Clear Skies; October 19th, 2024 at 06:04 PM. Reason: added info about near-infrared
    Victor van Wulfen

    clearskies.eu | Clear Skies Observing Guides #CSOG | Blog | Observing Log | Observing Sessions

    - SQM is nothing. Transparency is everything.

  5. #5
    Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    La Serena, Chile
    Posts
    445
    The Hubble image shows that there is a shell so there is a possibility that it can be observed visually. In that sense the Hubble pic can very well be used for planning observations.

    A shell of 4" x 2" is tiny but not impossible. 4" is comparable to the size of the disk of Uranus. 2" is comparable to the size of the disk of Neptune. It is possible to discern the disks of Ganymede and other Jovian moons visually and those are even smaller.

    Having said that, discerning a faint tiny disk surrounding a magnitude 7 star is challenging, to put it mildly. But given the right sky conditions and optical elements, I don't think it is impossible, especially if filters can be used that dim the star but not the disk.


    Clear skies, Wouter
    Last edited by wvreeven; October 19th, 2024 at 01:21 PM.
    Clear, dark, transparent skies, Wouter

    20" F/5 custom Dob (Chile)
    12" F/5 custom Dob (Chile)
    12" F/5 Explore Scientific Ultra Light Gen 2 Dob (Spain)
    94 mm SharpStar Refractor (Chile, Spain)

  6. #6
    Member Clear Skies's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    the Netherlands
    Posts
    319
    .
    Quote Originally Posted by wvreeven View Post
    The Hubble image shows that there is a shell so there is a possibility that it can be observed visually. In that sense the Hubble pic can very well be used for planning observations.

    A shell of 4" x 2" is tiny but not impossible. 4" is comparable to the size of the disk of Uranus. 2" is comparable to the size of the disk of Neptune. It is possible to discern the disks of Ganymede and other Jovian moons visually and those are even smaller.

    Having said that, discerning a faint tiny disk surrounding a magnitude 7 star is challenging, to put it mildly. But given the right sky conditions and optical elements, I don't think it is impossible, especially if filters can be used that dim the star but not the disk.


    Clear skies, Wouter

    Yeah, no.
    Victor van Wulfen

    clearskies.eu | Clear Skies Observing Guides #CSOG | Blog | Observing Log | Observing Sessions

    - SQM is nothing. Transparency is everything.

  7. #7
    Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    La Serena, Chile
    Posts
    445
    Quote Originally Posted by Clear Skies View Post
    .


    Yeah, no.
    Can you give a more constructive reply?

    With my 12" I have observed the disks of several stellar planetary nebulae so I know it is possible. Also TS states that two other observers confirmed their observations.
    Clear, dark, transparent skies, Wouter

    20" F/5 custom Dob (Chile)
    12" F/5 custom Dob (Chile)
    12" F/5 Explore Scientific Ultra Light Gen 2 Dob (Spain)
    94 mm SharpStar Refractor (Chile, Spain)

  8. #8
    Member
    Join Date
    May 2022
    Location
    Bangalore, India
    Posts
    3
    Thanks Steve Gottlieb, for the HST image & an amazing list of post AGB objects. I will try & add as many as I can for the 12" scope.

    Thanks Victor, for the response. Hopefully you didn't struggle like me at higher magnifications. Upto which magnication did you go? There was a 2-star system nearby & this halo was slightly larger than their combined halo.

    I had no prior knowledge on the type of object. 'PN G' (which is the original catalogue that I had) meant that I was looking for a planetary nebulae & went in for observation blindly without giving much thought. Once I encountered something peculiar, asked two other friends who were observing together, to take a look at it. I have observed Neptune in Jan 2024, as a tiny non-stellar disk with greenish/bluish hues. My original expectations of this PNG object prior to observation was "12inch: Try….no size info given…." (from Stellarium).

    Thanks wvreeven, for the response. Appreciate the inputs on the dimensions. Once the other observers did suspect orientation, we did cross check in the HST images & found some elongation. Other observers were pretty young (atleast 15 & 20 years younger). It took a while to locate this object in the internet (that's when the IRAS designation was found). After spending 2hrs on the object, on that night, I felt strongly about it. I couldn't observe any orientation per se, it looked circular to me (aged 50yrs). I hope to repeat the observation next Sept/Oct. Lets see. In the meanwhile, hope some of you will try & observe the beauty...and report here.

    In the meanwhile, clear skies to you all. Thank you for reading. Hopefully it inspired some of you to take a relook at post-AGB stars.

  9. #9
    Member akarsh's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    Sunnyvale, CA
    Posts
    392
    I was one of the observers who saw the halo around the star. There was definitely a brighter halo around V814 Her than other stars that "appeared" roughly similar in brightness. I put appeared in quotes because the reference star we used for comparison was about a magnitude fainter when I checked later – so it is plausible that we were misled.

    I also noted the inner halo with an elongation. Soon after we observed it, I independently found the HST paper and noticed that the elongation was north-south. The elongation we observed was not a north-south elongation, so I imagine this inner halo must be attributed to optics. We were observing at 333× with a 12-arcminute field-of-view. Both me and the other observer (Mihir) who studied the inner "halo" agreed on the orientation, so it was something "real" except it may be (and is very likely) due to optics. The "outer" circular halo, though, seemed more real to me – but as I said our comparison star was fainter as I checked later. I would like to follow it up with my 28" when I get a chance.
    Last edited by akarsh; October 28th, 2024 at 07:54 AM.
    28" f/4
    18" f/4.5 Obsession Classic
    6" f/8 Orion SkyQuest
    Garrett Optical 25x100
    Homepage
    DSS Tool : Logbook Project : KStars : Adventures in Deep Space
    The Astronomy Connection : Austin Astronomical Society : Bangalore Astronomical Society

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •