All_About_Space_-_Issue_94_2020

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The Crescent Nebula (NGC 6888)
This magnitude 7.4 emission nebula has a
distinctive crescent shape in a low-power
telescope eyepiece. Around 5,000 light years away,
the nebula is best seen using averted vision.

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The Veil Nebula
The ghostly remains of a star that blew up
around 8,000 years ago, the Veil Nebula is 5th
magnitude, but it is so large and diffuse you’ll need a
telescope and a dark sky to see its faint, misty arcs.

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Messier 56
One of the faintest globular clusters in
Messier’s catalogue, magnitude 8.3 M56 can be
resolved almost to its centre through a telescope’s
high-power eyepiece.

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The Blinking Nebula (NGC 6826)
This magnitude 8.9 planetary nebula looks
like a small, blue-green oval in a large
telescope. Looking at and then away from its central
star makes the nebula appear to blink on and off.

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The Fireworks Galaxy (NGC 6946)
The curved arms of this beautiful face-on
spiral galaxy are best seen through the high-
power eyepiece of a large telescope. The galaxy is
ablaze with colourful areas of star formation.

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NGC 6803
At magnitude 11.5 this planetary nebula is so
faintyou’llneeda largetelescopeundera very
darkskytoseeitstiny,palebluedisc.Itismorethan
6,000lightyearsawayfromEarth.

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Vulpecula


Sagitta


Lacerta


Delphinus


Scutum


Serpens


Cauda


Cygnus


Ophiuchus


Hercules


Ly ra


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M56

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