Jones-Emberson 1

{{ Planetary nebula |

| image = 250px

| caption = Planetary Nebula Jones-Emberson 1 (PK164+31.1).

| name = Jones-Emberson 1

| type =

| epoch = J2000

| ra = {{RA|07|57|51.628}}{{cite simbad

| title=PN ARO 121

| accessdate=2009-12-07}}

| dec = {{DEC|+53|25|16.96}}

| dist_ly = 1600

| appmag_v = 14

| size_v = 400 arc seconds

| constellation = Lynx

| radius_ly =

| absmag_v =

| notes =

| names = PK164+31.1, PN ARO 121, Headphone Nebula{{cite journal |last1=Moore |first1=S. L. |last2=Jones |first2=A. |last3=Privett |first3=G. |last4=Arditti |first4=D. |title=Jones-Emberson 1, the 'Headphone Nebula' |journal=Journal of the British Astronomical Association |date=2011 |volume=121 |issue=6 |pages=369–370 |url=https://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/2011JBAA..121..369M |access-date=13 July 2024 |publisher=SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)|bibcode=2011JBAA..121..369M }}

}}

Jones-Emberson 1 (PK 164+31.1), also known as the Headphone Nebula, is a 14th magnitude planetary nebula in the constellation Lynx at a distance of 1600 light years. It is a larger planetary with low surface brightness. The 16.8-magnitude central star is a very blue white dwarf.

Historic data

Discovered in 1939 by Rebecca Jones and Richard M. Emberson, its "PK" designation comes from the names of Czechoslovakian astronomers Luboš Perek and Luboš Kohoutek, who in 1967 created an extensive catalog of all of the planetary nebulae known in the Milky Way as of 1964. The numbers indicate the position of the object on the sky. ("PK 164+31.1" basically represents the planetary nebula that when using the galactic coordinate system has a galactic longitude of 164 degrees, a galactic latitude of +31 degrees, and is the first such object in the Perek-Kohoutek catalog to occupy that particular one square degree area of sky).

Gallery

Jones1 Mark Johnston.png|Amateur astronomer photo of Jones-Emberson 1

Headphones Nebula .jpg|Planetary nebula Jones-Emberson 1 (PK164+31.1) shot in HOO

See also

References