IC 443

Jellyfish Nebula

IC 443, the Jellyfish Nebula, is a 70-light-year-wide galactic supernova remnant located roughly 5,000 light-years away in the Gemini constellation. Estimated to be 3,000–30,000 years old, it features distinctive gaseous “tentacles” created by an exploding star and houses a likely pulsar (CXOU J061705) at its southern edge.

Key Characteristics

location:

Near the star Eta Geminorum in the constellation Gemini.

structure:

Comprises two connected sub-shells with different radii, often observed with a dark lane running northwest to southeast.

interaction:

The blast wave is currently interacting with dense, clumpy molecular clouds, creating bright, complex emission filaments.

observation:

Best viewed/photographed during winter and early spring. It is considered a challenging, yet popular target for astrophotography.

alternative designations:

Sharpless 248 (Sh2-248).