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View Full Version : Object of the Week February 6th 2022 - NGC 2242



obrazell
February 6th, 2022, 09:01 AM
NGC 2242

Other Names PN G170.3+15.8

Planetary Nebula

Constellation Auriga

RA: 06h 34.127m

Dec: +44° 46.62'

Mag: 15.1 (P)

Size: 22.0"

Mag C. Star: 17.6

When we think of planetary nebulae in Auriga we tend to think of IC 2149 but many observers are
unaware of the fact that there is also an NGC planetary in the constellation. When Lewis Swift
discovered NGC 2242 in 1886 using the 16” refractor at the Warner observatory in Rochester,
New York he could not have realised that he had found the last planetary nebula to be added
into the NGC. Having said that for most of the time since its discovery NGC 2242 has been
thought to be a galaxy, and indeed Zwicky catalogued it as such in the CGCG. it was not until
1987 that it was examined and found to be a planetary nebula, albeit a rather faint one, although
Sulentic and Tifft had suggested it might be a PN in 1973 in the RNGC.

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The planetary is thought to be about 6500 light years away and about 1500 light years above
the galactic plane. It is probably one of only a handful of halo PN known. In age terms
NGC 2242 is thought to be very old. The morphology of the planetary is somewhat
reminiscent of the much brighter NGC 7662 with an inner ring and halo, at least on the
SDSS image.

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The central star is very hot with a modelled temperature of around
137000K so most of its light output will be in the UV. Its spectral type is given as
O(H). This has translated to a very high nebular temperature of perhaps 25000K.
NGC 2242’s late re-classification as a planetary nebula is probably why it has not
appeared in any of the main observing guides. There also appears to be some confusion
over how best to observe it. Steve Gottlieb suggested that when using his 17.5” it did
not respond well to filters however, Kent Wallace in his monumental guide on visual
observations of planetary nebulae using a 20” (50cm) suggests that it does respond
to both UHC and OIII filters so it maybe that you need a larger telescope to get a filter
effect. There are no reports that it responds to an H-Beta filter. Its spectra shows quite
strong OIII and H-beta lines so it should really respond to those filters. NGC 2242 is
probably one of the faintest, if not the faintest, planetary nebulae in the NGC so it may
require significant apertures to find, possibly in the range 40 cm at up. Swift described
the object at discovery as exceedingly faint and very small and round. I suspect that to
see much more than a faint circular patch is going to require a telescope in the 50cm+
class and probably better skies than we have in the UK. I suspect that because of its
size that a high power is probably going to be required to find it, which may also be part
of the reasons that filters do not work so well. The central star is going to be much too faint
to see at around 18th magnitude. The Interstellarum Field Guide suggests that it is an
object for larger telescopes although I guess that observers from high altitude may see
it with smaller ones.

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Image of NGC 2242 by Ian Smith

And as always,
Give it a go and let us know! Good luck and great viewing!

Raul Leon
February 6th, 2022, 12:18 PM
Hi here's my observation from 11/9/2012: ngc 2242 planetary nebula in Auriga ; mag:15 ; size:22" ; small, extremely faint round glow; observed with hood and UHC filter; one of the dimmest objects I've observed! I used a 6mm Ethos at 304x with my 14.5 Starstructure f/4.34606

wvreeven
February 6th, 2022, 12:51 PM
My notes with my 12" dob read that I am unsure if I saw it. At 88x and 188x using an OIII filter I suspect a faint small glow around a faint star. I also noted that I need to revisit this nebula with my 20" which is going to be hard since that telescope now is in Chile and the nebula doesn't rise high above the horizon there...

Clear Skies
February 6th, 2022, 01:18 PM
Two observations in my log for this little round glow, because that's what is was, both in the autumn of 2017 and the winter of 2020, both from the French Ardennes and both in my 14" SCT. The highest magnification I used was 259x, but it remained even in brightness. A UHC filter did not enhance the view and the first time around it vanished when I used an OIII filter.

Perhaps other observations in larger apertures teased out its annular nature?

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Click here (https://clearskies.eu/csog/downloads/dsfootw2022#6) to download the observing guide.

Uwe Glahn
February 11th, 2022, 02:25 PM
Just checked my old entry with the former 20-inch under good transparency of a Pre-Alps location. I noted:

faint, filled disk; small and nearly round, perhaps somewhat NE-SW elongated; does not respond well on [OIII] and Hß filters; CS steadily visible with averted vision; faint, small diffuse ring around central ring-like disk

sketch: 20", 575x, NELM 6m5+, Seeing III
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home (http://www.deepsky-visuell.de/Zeichnungen/NGC2242.htm)