MISCLASSIFIED
MILKY WAY
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NGC 6302 | IRAS 17103-3702 | GSC2.4.2 S8BL183805 | AAVSO - |
SIMBAD NGC 6302 | Pan-STARRS - | SAO - | VSX - |
GAIA DR3 5973805626181381504 | SkyMapper - | WRAY 16-259 | GCVS - |
2MASS J17134421-3706118 | HIP - | Hen - | BD - |
WISE J171344.47-370612.3 | TYC - | ESO - | HD - |
Bidelman (1954) | - | Allen (1984) | - | Belzcyński et al. (2001) | - |
Gaposchkin (1957) | - | Kenyon (1986) | - | Akras et al. (2019) | NGC 6302 (Susp.) |
Boyarchuk (1969) | - | Vaidis (1988, 1991) | - |
Right ascension (°) | 258.4353Ref | Parallax (mas) | - | Reddening E(B-V) (mag) | 4.36±0.29Ref, Note |
Declination (°) | -37.1038Ref | Distance (kpc) | -, Note |
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Galactic longitude (°) | 349.5085Ref | Proper motion in α (mas/yr) | - | ||
Galactic latitude (°) | 1.0554Ref | Proper motion in δ (mas/yr) | - |
This star was added to the list of possible symbiotic stars in Akras et al. (2019), likely based on the findings of Feibelman (2001). The latter study detected stellar O V, O VI, O VII, and O VIII lines in the IUE spectra of NGC 6302. However, the identification of the central star of this planetary nebula by Szyszka et al. (2009) appears to contradict its symbiotic nature. Some structures within the nebula might have originated from an eruptive event approximately 1900 years ago, as indicated by Meaburn et al. (2005). The object previously recognized as NGC6032's central star was contested to be a foreground field star in Kastner et al. (2022).