MSH 11-54 or G292.0+1.8 a faint SNR

MSH 11-54 or G292.0+1.8 a faint SNR
MSH 11-54 or G292.0+1.8 a faint SNR

quipment
Telescope

Planewave CDK700
Camera

Moravian Instruments C5A-100M
Mount

Planewave 700 Series Gimbal
Filters

Chroma Blue 2″
Chroma Green 2″
Chroma H-alpha 3nm Bandpass 50 mm
Chroma OIII 3nm Bandpass 50 mm
Chroma Red 2″
Software

Adobe Photoshop
Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight
Description
This is a really faint and was a challenging one to process! Very delicate OIII details obscured by dense stars and dust!

MSH 11-54 also known as G292.0+1.8, is a supernova remnant located about 20,000 light-years away in the southern constellation Centaurus near the Southern Cross. It spans roughly 8 arc minutes, or about 47 light-years across. MSH 11-54 is an oxygen-rich remnant of a massive supernova.

In this image, the brightest region appears as a cyan-blue core, dominated by OIII emission from fast-moving, shock-heated oxygen-rich ejecta. Within this central structure, delicate filaments and irregular knots can be seen, tracing the complex internal structure of the remnant. Fainter reddish filaments are interwoven, marking areas of Hα emission where hydrogen is being ionized by the expanding shock front.

Extending outward from the core is a halo of diffuse emission, particularly noticeable to the upper right, where filamentary structures suggest continued interaction with the surrounding interstellar medium.

Dark, desaturated regions—especially toward the left—appear to be areas of foreground dust, which may help explain why this remnant is so faint in visible light.
While MSH 11-54 has been studied extensively in X-ray (e.g., by HEAO A-2 and Chandra) and infrared (e.g., by ESA’s ISO mission), it appears not to have been imaged in optical wavelengths likely due to its low surface brightness and the obscuring effects of dust.

Image acquisition and description credit: Thank you to Mike Selby at throughlightandtime.com

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