IC 63 – The Ghost Nebula

IC-63 The Ghost Nebula

Classification: Reflection / Emission Nebula

Distance: 550 light years

REF: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Ghost_Nebula_IC_63.jpg

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IC 63 (Ghost Nebula)
IC 63, nicknamed the Ghost Nebula, is a faint emission and reflection nebula in the constellation Cassiopeia, about 550 light-years away. It glows red from hydrogen gas ionized by the nearby star γ Cassiopeiae (Gamma Cas) and also reflects its blue light. IC 63 is part of a larger nebular complex (including IC 59) shaped by stellar winds and radiation.

IC 59
Located beside IC 63, IC 59 is another reflection/emission nebula influenced by γ Cassiopeiae. It is more diffuse, fainter, and dominated by reflection rather than emission, giving it a bluish hue. Together with IC 63, it forms a visually striking pair.

γ Cassiopeiae (Gamma Cas)
A bright, hot Be-type star in Cassiopeia, ~550 light-years away. It is about 19 times the Sun’s mass and rotates extremely fast, ejecting material into a surrounding disk. Its strong ultraviolet radiation ionizes nearby gas clouds, including IC 63 and IC 59. γ Cas is also a variable star with irregular brightness changes.

Cassiopeia Constellation
A prominent northern constellation, recognizable by its “W” shape. It lies in the rich star fields of the Milky Way and contains many notable deep-sky objects, including IC 59/63, the Heart and Soul Nebulae, and several open clusters. It is best viewed in northern autumn.