Hand of God Nebula (CG 4)

 Posted: Jun 3rd, 2026
Technical Info
Telescope/Lens: Celestron Origin
Camera: Sony Starvis IMX178
Mount: Celestron NexStar Evolution
Guide Scope: Celestron StarSense Autoguider
Software: Siril
 Masterton, New Zealand
116
Resolution: 2886x1931 px
Scale: 911 KB

Hand of God Nebula (CG 4)

230 subs at 60 seconds each – 1000 ISO, Bortle 2 – 3

Total Data: 3¾ Hours

Taken with Celestron Origin.

West Taratahi Hall, Chester Rd, Masterton, NZ.

8th – 12th  March 2026

Stacked and processed in Siril, using Veralux Scripts.

To me, it looks like a serpent mouth reaching out to swallow the galaxy.

CG 4 (Cometary Globule 4), known as the "Hand of God" or "Jaws of the Beast," is a striking, 8 light-year-long star-forming region in the constellation Puppis, located about 1,300 light-years away. This dense cloud of gas and dust appears to be "reaching" toward a distant galaxy (PGC 21338), though this is a chance alignment.

The "Monster" Illusion: In many long-exposure photographs, the "mouth" of the cometary globule CG 4 appears to be about to "devour" PGC 21338. However, this is purely a perspective effect; CG 4 is part of our own Milky Way galaxy and is only about 1,300 light-years away, meaning the galaxy is roughly 100,000 times further away than the nebula.

 

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Comments

It looks nice! But up to me it's a bit dark and depressing :) Just my opinion.

P.S. thanks for rare (at this site) photos from the southern hemisphere!
4 Jun, 2026 Reply
Robin Warnes Replied to Buzzard
Many thanks for your feedback. The image was taken using the Origin clear filter so that may account for the dark result. I think dark nebula like this is often captured in monochrome with combined filters to enhance and manipulate the colour in the nebula. Also colour can be very subjective and I think filters are often employed to highlight different gases and colour wavelengths in the nebula.
4 Jun, 2026 Reply

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