Diffuse Nebula M43 (NGC 1982), an emission and reflection nebula, in Orion

De Mairan's Nebula, part of Orion Nebula

[m43.jpg]
Right Ascension 05 : 35.6 (h:m)
Declination -05 : 16 (deg:m)
Distance 1.6 (kly)
Visual Brightness 9.0 (mag)
Apparent Dimension 20x15 (arc min)
Discovered by Jean -Jacques
Dortous de
Mairan by 1750

M43 is actually a part of the Great Orion Nebula, M42, which is separated from the main nebula by an impressive, turbulent dark lane. It was first reported by de Mairan in 1733 as a "brilliance surrounding a star" which he thought was "very similar to the atmosphere of our Sun, if it were dense enough and extensive enough to be visible in telescopes at a similar distance". Charles Messier included in his fine drawing of the Orion Nebula, and assigned it an extra catalog number. Moreover, William Herschel took it into his list with the number H III.1, although normally he careful avoided to assign his numbers to Messier objects.

The diffuse nebula M43 surrounds the irregular young "nebula variable" NU Orionis (HD 37061, attn: Not "nu Orionis") of magnitude 6.5-7.6 and spectral type BIV. It seems that M43 is excited to shine by this star, and contains its own, separate small cluster of stars which have formed in this part of the Orion nebula.

The dark features along its eastern border are well visible in telescopes starting at about 8 inch. The nebula itself is a fine view even in a 4-inch. Alister Ling in his recent review of observing the Orion nebula with filters (Astronomy, December 1995 issue), mentions the Comma shape of this nebula.

Our image was obtained by David Malin with the 3.9-meter Anglo-Australian Telescope.

Messier observed M43 on March 4th, 1769  "Position of the faint stars that is surrounded by nebulosity and that lies below the nebula (view inverted) in the sword of Orion." Charles Messier

Close by: M42 and NGC 1977

Courtesy www.seds.org