Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Carina (Car)  ·  Contains:  HD92206  ·  HD92207  ·  IC 2599  ·  NGC 3324
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The Gabriela Mistral Nebula (NGC 3324 & IC 2599), Paul Lloyd
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The Gabriela Mistral Nebula (NGC 3324 & IC 2599)

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
The Gabriela Mistral Nebula (NGC 3324 & IC 2599), Paul Lloyd
Powered byPixInsight

The Gabriela Mistral Nebula (NGC 3324 & IC 2599)

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Description

Just to the north-west of the Great Carina Nebula (NGC 3372, G.C.N.) lies the Gabriela Mistral Nebula.
This nebula is named after the well-known Chilean poet because of its resemblance to her. While the
common name actually refers to the nebula itself (catalogued as IC 2599, GUM 31) it has come to refer
to the nebula and its associated open star cluster, NGC 3324.

At 9,100ly distant, NGC 3324 is just a little further away than the G.C.N. (8,500ly), but is obviously
associated with it. It is a region of active and rapid star birth. The stellar winds from these young,
hot stars, have scuplted the nebula into the shape we now see it. The open cluster itself, is fairly
dispersed with little core condensation. Infra-red studies, though, have revealed numerous small
groupings of stars throughout the region.

This nebula, or at least a small section of the “facial profile”, was the subject of the James Webb
Space Telescope’s initial suite of 5 images shown to the public. Referred to as “Cosmic Cliffs” the
highly magnified JWST’s image sheds much detail on this star-forming region.


Telescope: APM 152mm f/7.9 APO refractor, 1.75x Barlow, f=2260mm
Camera:     ZWO ASI294MC Pro
Exposure:  13 x 300 sec, no filter
                    Bortle 3-4 sky, 65% Moon waning
Field of View: approx. 0º 29’ x 0º 19’
Image processed and prepared in PixInsight and Photoshop Elements

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The Gabriela Mistral Nebula (NGC 3324 & IC 2599), Paul Lloyd