Sh 2-114
| Nebula | |
|---|---|
Image of Sh 2-114 Nebula | |
| Observation data: epoch | |
| Right ascension | 21h 21m 12.00s |
| Declination | +38° 42′ 0.0″ |
| Distance | 1180 ± 100 pc |
| Constellation | Cygnus |
| Designations | Sh 2-114, LBN 347 |
Sh 2-114 (also known as Flying Dragon Nebula) is a faint emission nebula located in the constellation of Cygnus. It lies roughly 4° East-Northeast of star Sigma Cygni.[1][2][3][4][5]
At the northeastern edge is a small bipolar planetary nebula Kronberger 26 (also known as Lan 384), discovered in 2006 and confirmed as a true planetary nebula in 2011. Kn 26 appears as a faint butterfly-shaped object in deep images and is unrelated to Sh 2-114 except by line-of-sight projection.[6][7][8][9]
Reference
- ^ "Sh 2-114". galaxymap.org. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
- ^ "SH2-114 -The Flying Dragon Nebula - a VERY Faint Challenge Target - 17.5 hours HSSrgb". Cosgrove's Cosmos. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
- ^ Brecher, Ron (2023-12-01). "Sh2-114, The Flying Dragon Nebula". Astrodoc: Astrophotography by Ron Brecher. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
- ^ Giovanni1717. "SH 2-114 - astrophotography by Giovanni1717". Telescopius. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Distant Lights - sh2-114". www.distant-lights.at. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
- ^ "Simbad - Object view". simbad.cds.unistra.fr. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
- ^ info@noirlab.edu. "Emission Nebula Sh2-114". www.noirlab.edu. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
- ^ "Sh2-114 Flying Dragon nebula". Sara Wager Astrophotography. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
- ^ June 24, benjaminlaw; 2023 0. "Flying Dragon Nebula Sh2-114". Sky & Telescope. Retrieved 2025-11-30.
{{cite web}}:|last2=has numeric name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)