An emission-line survey of the Milky WayDirect photography of gaseous nebulae using interference filters to isolate individual emission lines is capable both of discriminating between different ions and of enhancing the visibility of nebulae by suppressing stellar images and the quasi-continuous sky background in favor of the chosen band pass.
The instrumentation used in an examination of the ionization structure of emission nebulae and of the galactic plane in general, is described, as well as the characteristics of the prints obtained. Reasonable exposure times were obtained with the use of an image intensifier and five interference filters isolated the band passes chosen for the survey. A rough map of each field is presented with a print from the Becvar Skalnate Pleso covering the same area.
The structural differences which the authors hoped to record can be seen in many of the fields included in this volume. For purposes of illustration, they are strikingly shown in the fields centered about the following "new" galactic coordinates, where l is longitude and b is latitude: I = 138 °, b = 0°; l = 293 °, b = 0°; and l = 263 °, b = 0 °. In addition to investigating the structure of known emission nebulae, the authors also hoped to find some new objects. By far the most striking of such discoveries is the new supernova remnant in the field l= 65.5 °, b = +5 °.
Document ID
19800003716
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Special Publication (SP)
Authors
Robert A. R. Parker (Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas, United States)
Theodore R. Gull (Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Robert P. Kirschner (University of Michigan–Ann Arbor Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States)