NGC 6357

Emission nebula in the constellation Scorpius From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

NGC 6357

NGC 6357 is a diffuse nebula near NGC 6334 in the constellation Scorpius. The nebula contains many proto-stars shielded by dark discs of gas, and young stars wrapped in expanding "cocoons" or expanding gases surrounding these small stars. It is also known as the Lobster Nebula.[4][5] This nebula was given the name War and Peace Nebula by the Midcourse Space Experiment scientists because of its appearance, which, in infrared images the bright, western part resembles a dove, while the eastern part looks like a skull.[6] A petition by anime fans to rename it as the Madokami nebula, due to resemblance with a character, was unsuccessful.[7][8]

Quick Facts Emission nebula, Observation data: J2000 epoch ...
NGC 6357
Emission nebula
H II region
Thumb
NGC 6357 composite image
Observation data: J2000 epoch
Right ascension17h 24m [1]
Declination−34° 20[1]
Distance~5900±450[2] ly   (1800±140 pc)
ConstellationScorpius[3]
DesignationsWar and Peace Nebula,[1] Lobster Nebula [4] Sharpless 11, RCW 131, Gum 66, Madokami
See also: Lists of nebulae
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It is located about 5,500 light years away from Earth.[9] NGC 6357 is connected by a filamentary structure to NGC 6334, and the two may form a single complex.[10]

Associated open clusters

Pismis 24

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A Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image of Pismis 24-1, the "core" of NGC 6357.
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Dark Energy Camera captures the star-forming nebula NGC 6357

This nebula includes the open cluster Pismis 24, which is home to several massive stars. One of the brightest stars in the cluster, Pismis 24-1, was thought possibly to be the most massive on record, approaching 300 solar masses, until it was discovered to be a multiple system of at least three stars; component stars would still remain near 100 solar masses each, making them among the more massive stars on record.[11][12]

G353.2+0.7

The young stellar cluster G353.2+0.7 lies east of Pismis 24 and was revealed by a Chandra X-ray image showing approximately 800 stars.[13]

G353.1+0.6

The young stellar cluster G353.1+0.6 lies southeast of Pismis 24 and also contains approximately 800 stars detected by X-ray.[13] The region includes several O-type stars, including [BDSB2003] 10.[14]

Massive stars

NGC 6357 is one of the most prominent sites of massive-star formation in our neighborhood of the Milky Way. A variety of early O-type stars reside in this nebula, blowing the bubbles around the star clusters that can be seen in the molecular cloud.

More information Star name, Spectral type ...
Prominent stars in Pismis 24[15]
Star name Spectral type Magnitude
(Mbol)
Temperature[16]
(K)
Radius
(R)
Mass
(M)
WR 93 (HD 157504) WC7 -11.2 71,000 10 120
Pismis 24-1NEO3.5 If*10.042,0001774
Pismis 24-1SWO4 III9.841,5001666
Pismis 24-2O5.5 V(f)8.940,0001243
Pismis 24-3O8 V7.733,400925
Pismis 24-10O9 V7.231,500820
Pismis 24-12B1 V5.330,000411
Pismis 24-13O6.5 III((f))8.635,6001235
Pismis 24-15O8 V7.833,4001025
Pismis 24-16O7.5 V9.034,0001638
Pismis 24-17O3.5 III10.142,7001778
Pismis 24-18B0.5 V6.430,000615
Pismis 24-19B0.5 V5.430,000411
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See also

References

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