owlice wrote:I love this APOD, every bit of it!!!!
(I'm sure that astonishes no one...)
I was about to remark that owlice might like today's APOD!
It is a wonderful and odd pairing! You can even faintly see the halo around the Owl Nebula, which was discovered in 1992 by the astronomers Karen Kwitter, You-Hua Chu and Ronald Downes. It is usually
more easily seen in narrowband images.
Another much
less well known pairing of a galaxy pair and a planetary nebula is NGC 4725 and NGC 4747 along with LoTr 5.
One that has never been imaged is the southern pairing of NGC 5121 and Longmore 8.
Even more rare and interesting are pairings of planetary nebulae, there are a surprising number that are mostly southern and unphotographed:
1.
Shapley 1 and
VBRC 7 in Norma.
2.
NGC 2899 and
VBRC 2 in Vela
3. MeWe 2-4 and Fr 2-8 in Centaurus
4.
Murrell 1 and Patchick 33 in Lupus
Other planetary nebula pairings include star clusters:
1.
NGC 6440 and NGC 6445 in Sagittarius
2.
NGC 6712 and IC 1295 in Scutum
3.
NGC 2141 and WDHS 1 in Orion
4.
Pismis 3 and VBRC 1 in Vela
5. NGC 5823 and the Mask Nebula in Circinus
Some other clusters just happen to share their line of sight with another planetary nebula:
1.
M46 with NGC 2438 in Puppis
2.
NGC 2818 with NGC 2818A in Pyxis
3. NGC 5617 with PN G314.6-00.1 in Centaurus, can be seen near the centre of this
image by Kfir Simon.
However there is one planetary nebula that has been confirmed to be a true member of an open cluster, this is
PN G305.3-03.1 in the cluster ESO 96-4 in Musca.
Professional astronomers have also
investigated other possible open cluster and planetary nebula associations.
Finally, some globular clusters are known to contain planetary nebulae in the Milky Way and other galaxies, the most notable of which is
M15 with Pease 1 in Pegasus.