ScienceDownEast | ScienceDownEast Astrophotography | Messier Objects | M27 Dumbbell Nebula 10x1200

M27 Dumbbell Nebula 10x1200
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The Dumbbell Nebula (Messier 27, NGC 6853) is a bright, nearby planetary nebula in the small constellation Vulpecula. It is the expanding, ionized shell of gas cast off by a Sun-like star near the end of its life; a hot white dwarf remnant at the center illuminates the nebula, with strong O III and Hα emission producing its characteristic “dumbbell” or apple-core shape. Discovered by Charles Messier in 1764, M27 is among the most rewarding planetary nebulae for visual observers and imagers.

At a distance of roughly ~1,300–1,400 light-years (M27 overview), the main nebular structure spans about 8′ × 5.6′ on the sky, corresponding to a physical size of roughly 2.5–3 light-years. In the eyepiece it shows best at moderate magnification; an O III or UHC filter greatly enhances contrast, revealing the bright lobes and fainter outer halo. Look for M27 in Vulpecula, roughly midway between the stars γ and 14 Vul, just north of the Summer Triangle.

Total image time was 3 hours and 20 minutes.

Moon PhaseWaxing Gibbous 15% - 90%
Exposure10 x 20 min
Gain100
CameraToupTek ATR2600C [6224 × 4168]
Optics120mm Sky-Watcher Esprit on a Proxisky UMi20S Strain Wave mount
GuidingToupTek GPM462M using PHD2 with a 400mm guide scope. Average 15-min sub GuideRMS ranged from 0.53 to 0.74 using 0.5s exposures.
ControllerKStars on MeLe Quieter 4C
FilterTriad Quad Ultra (strong O III/Hα response for planetary nebulae)
LocationSt. Croix Observatory and Lower Sackville, Nova Scotia.
Date2025-11-02
ProcessingProcessed in PixInsight.
PixInsight Processing
WeightedBatchPreprocessing Script
BlurXTerminator
GraXpert
NoiseXTerminator
StarXTerminator
Generalized Hyperbolic Stretch on both the stars and starless images
HDRMultiScaleTransform on the Starless image
PixelMath to recombine the images
CurveTransformation



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