
NGC 6611 · nebula
Pillars of Creation region
The Eagle Nebula is a young open cluster of stars in the constellation Serpens, discovered by Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux in 1745–46.
Image: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA).
Identity & coordinates
Identification
- Primary designation
- NGC 6611
- All designations
- NGC 6611 · Pillars of Creation region
- Object type
- Nebula
- Constellation
- Serpens
- Best viewing
- Summer
Coordinates & physical
- Right ascension (J2000)
- 18h 18m 48s
- Declination (J2000)
- −13° 48' 26"
- Apparent magnitude (V)
- —
- Distance
- —
Visibility tonight
The science
The Eagle Nebula is a young open cluster of stars in the constellation Serpens, discovered by Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux in 1745–46. Both the "Eagle" and the "Star Queen" refer to visual impressions of the dark silhouette near the center of the nebula, an area made famous as the "Pillars of Creation" imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope. The nebula contains several active star-forming gas and dust regions, including the aforementioned Pillars of Creation. The Eagle Nebula lies in the Sagittarius Arm of the Milky Way.
Summary adapted from Wikipedia · CC-BY-SA-4.0
References
- SIMBAD Not resolved
- NED Fetched May 8, 2026 View in NED ↗
- Wikipedia Fetched May 8, 2026 Read full article ↗
Wikipedia title resolved via id — the catalog designation was a Wikipedia article title directly.
1 merge conflict resolved
- coordinates: SIMBAD missing → NED used



