Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Orion (Ori)  ·  Contains:  34 Ori)  ·  41 Ori A)  ·  41 Ori C  ·  42 Ori)  ·  43 Ori)  ·  46 Ori)  ·  48 Ori  ·  50 Ori)  ·  Flame Nebula  ·  Great Orion Nebula  ·  IC 426  ·  IC 431  ·  IC 432  ·  IC 434  ·  M 42  ·  M 43  ·  Mairan's Nebula  ·  NGC 1975  ·  NGC 1976  ·  NGC 1977  ·  NGC 1981  ·  NGC 1982  ·  NGC 2023  ·  NGC 2024  ·  NGC 2064  ·  NGC 2067  ·  NGC 2112  ·  Orion B  ·  Orion Nebula  ·  Part of the constellation Orion (Ori)  ·  And 12 more.
Telescope Live April competition, Gustav Lundby
Telescope Live April competition
Powered byPixInsight

Telescope Live April competition

Telescope Live April competition, Gustav Lundby
Telescope Live April competition
Powered byPixInsight

Telescope Live April competition

Equipment

Loading...

Acquisition details

Loading...

Description

IC 434 is a **bright emission nebula** in the constellation Orion, about 1,500 light years away from Earth¹². It was discovered by **William Herschel** on February 1, 1786².

IC 434 is part of the Orion molecular cloud complex, a large region of star formation and interstellar gas and dust¹. IC 434 is ionized by the radiation from the hot star Sigma Orionis, which lies above it¹².

IC 434 is famous for being the background of the **Horsehead Nebula**, a dark nebula that appears as a silhouette of a horse's head against the bright emission nebula¹²³. The Horsehead Nebula is also known as Barnard 33 or NGC 2024¹³.

IC 434 has an apparent magnitude of **7.3** and can be seen with a medium-sized telescope². It appears as a long strip of reddish light near the bright star Alnitak, the easternmost star of Orion's Belt¹². It is best seen from the northern hemisphere during winter months².

Kilde: Samtale med Bing, 18.6.2023
(1) Horsehead Nebula - Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horsehead_Nebula.
(2) IC 434 - Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IC_434.
(3) IC 434 - Wikipedia. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/IC_434.

Comments

Sky plot

Sky plot

Histogram

Telescope Live April competition, Gustav Lundby