Astronomical Smorgasboard

The Lobster Claw Nebula (SH2-157) and Bubble Nebula (NGC 7635) are two striking emission nebulae located close to the border of Cassiopeia and Cepheus constellations. The Lobster Claw Nebula derives its name from the curved, segmented shapes that resemble a lobster’s pincers. It is an Ha II region of glowing ionized hydrogen excited by the intense ultraviolet radiation of nearby hot, young stars. Notably, within it lies the young Wolf-Rayet star 157, whose powerful stellar winds sculpt the surrounding gas into complex arcs and filaments.

Relatively nearby, the Bubble Nebula features a spherical bubble of gas about seven light-years across. The bubble is ‘blown’ by the fierce stellar wind of a massive O-type star (SAO 20575) at its centre. The expanding shell of gas glows where it collides with denser regions of the interstellar medium, producing a visually stunning contrast of colours.

Notwithstanding the spectacular nature of both of these nebulae, the image captures a myriad of other objects, which are identified in the accompanying plate solved image, notable of which are the open star clusters of M52 AKA the Scorpio Cluster and NGC 7510. Overall, the constellation of Cassiopeia is full of interesting nebulae and bright star clusters, which my second image from Castle Farm Observatory has caught in abundance.