GCRV 950 (Little Dumbbell Nebula) [#36011151]

Координаты

This system is located at: -1560.71875 / -382.71875 / -1351.9375

Галактические координаты: R: 2 100,012 / l: 130,900 / b: -10,501
Экваториальные координаты: прямое восхождение: 1h 42m 7,442s / склонение: 51° 35'6,950''


Объем ресурсов: Обилие

Обитаемая зона:
Metal-rich body (43 to 209 144 ls), Earth-like world (3 292 351 to 4 937 920 ls), Water world (2 699 722 to 10 455 543 ls), Ammonia world (6 830 951 to 18 587 631 ls), Terraformable (2 564 334 to 5 116 654 ls)

Прибл. стоимость данных сканирования: 433 852 кр.

Отчёт о передвижениях

This system was visited for the first time on EDSM by Sunny v. Isegrim.

Название, присвоенное Galactic Mapping Project: Little Dumbbell Nebula

288 ships passed through GCRV 950 space, including 0 ship in the last 7 days.

0 ship passed through GCRV 950 space in the last 24 hours.

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The Little Dumbbell Nebula (Messier 76, NGC 650/651, the Barbell Nebula, or the Cork Nebula) is a planetary nebula in the constellation Perseus. It was discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1780 and included in Charles Messier's catalog of comet-like objects as number 76. It was first recognized as a planetary nebula in 1918 by the astronomer Heber Doust Curtis.

The Little Dumbbell Nebula derives its common name from its resemblance to the Dumbbell Nebula (M27) in Vulpecula. It was originally thought to consist of two separate emission nebulae and was thus given two catalog numbers in the NGC 650 and 651. William Herschel in 1787 noticed that the nebula consisted of two brighter regions slightly separated by a fainter middle, hence the NGC assignment of two numbers to the object. Some consider this object to be one of the faintest and hardest to see objects in Messier's list.

The nebula appears to be the result of stellar material being ejected from the host O-class star. At 108,728 Kelvin it is similar to a Wolf-Rayet star, but with over 110 solar masses. The system also has 10 smaller stellar bodies from L-class up to K-class, plus gas giants and rocky bodies. The diffuse blues and pinks of the nebula are best seen from the dark side of one of the landable rocky planets.

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