Barnard 335

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Right ascension19h 36m 55.0s
Declination+07° 34 24
Distance536.5 ly   (164.5[1] pc)
Apparent diameter24.0'[2]
Barnard 335
Molecular cloud
Bok globule
B335
PanSTARRS + Spitzer (red) image of Barnard 335. The red object in the center is the protostar.
Observation data: J2000 epoch
Right ascension19h 36m 55.0s
Declination+07° 34 24
Distance536.5 ly   (164.5[1] pc)
Apparent diameter24.0'[2]
ConstellationAquila[3]
DesignationsLDN 663, [CB88] 199
See also: Lists of nebulae

Barnard 335 (also known as B335 or Lynds 663) is a bok globule. It contains a single very young low-mass protostar.[3][4]

Barnard 335 was discovered in 1927 by Barnard et al.[2] A range of distances were used in the past. In 2009 it was first noted that the south-west of the nebula is bright in the U-band. One possible explanation was that HD 184982 has a similar distance and causes a glow in the form of a reflection nebula. This was however dismissed at the time. The researchers measured a distance of 90 to 120 parsec.[5] Later it was demonstrated that HD 184982 is surrounded by a reflection nebula, apparently related to the bok globule Barnard 335. This star is located 164.5 parsec from the Solar System and Barnard 335 must lie at a similar distance.[1]

The molecular core of Barnard 335 is the densest part of a larger cometary globule. This suggests that external wind shaped the globule and triggered the formation of a single star inside it.[3]

See also

References

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