My Astrophotography – Barnard 39 (B39)

Barnard 39

  • Barnard 39 (B39) is a dark nebula.
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  • It has a dense cloud of interstellar dust that blocks the light of background stars, making it appear as a dark “V‑shaped” patch in wide‑field images of the Christmas Tree Nebula region.
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  • Object Name
    B39

  • Object Type
    Dark Nebula

  • Constellation
    Monoceros

  • Magnitude
    n/a

  • Distance
    2,700 ly

  • Annotate

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Equipment

Telescope:

Mount:

Accessories:

Sky-Watcher Esprint 80ED Triplet

Sky-Watcher AZ-EQ6 GT

ZWO ASIair Plus / PixInsight

Camera:

Guiding:

Filter:

ZWO ASI2600MC Pro cooling

ZWO ASI1200MM

2″ Optolong eNchance

Bortle Scale: Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire (Bortle 6.6)


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Integration

  • Date:
    Wednesday 25th November 2025
  • Moonlit:
    Waxing Crescent 5 days old
    Magnitude: -11.2
    Moonlit: 24%
  • Total:
    180’s x 50 subs = 2 hours 30 minutes

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Constellation :- Monoceros (The Unicorn)

Object :-

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Object :-

Other name :-

Type :-

Magnitude :

Distance :-

Constellation :-

Right Ascension :-

Declination :-

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B39

LDN 1610

Dark Nebula

n/a

2,700 light years / 23 light years across

Mon (Monoceros / The Unicorn)

06h 38m 27s

+10° 19′ 12″

Enlarge on click the map.

(Click the map above for a large view.)

Abbreviation:  Mon
English Name:  The Unicorn
Genitive: Lucida
Hemisphere:  Northern and Southern Hemisphere. (Bold means the more area in square feet in Southern Hemisphere.)
Location: Between the constellations of Canis Minor and Orion.
Visible between latitudes:  +75 and -85 degrees
Best season: Late winter
Seen in three seasons: Autumn, Winter and Spring
Best seen in: February (map) and March (map)
Seen between: February and April
Right Ascension (RA): 07 hour
Declination (DEC): -05 degrees
Area (square degrees):  482 square degrees (35th)

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Facts about B39

  • A wide‑angle view of the Christmas Tree Nebula region (NGC 2264) shows the vast scale of this cloud of gas and dust, far larger than the apparent size of the Full Moon.
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