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We searched for a fast moving H$alpha$ shell around the Crab nebula. Such a shell could account for this supernova remnants missing mass, and carry enough kinetic energy to make SN 1054 a normal Type II event. Deep H$alpha$ images were obtained with WFI at the 2.2m MPG/ESO telescope and with MOSCA at the 2.56m NOT. The data are compared with theoretical expectations derived from shell models with ballistic gas motion, constant temperature, constant degree of ionisation and a power law for the density profile. We reach a surface brightness limit of $5times10^{-8} ergs s^{-1} cm^{-2} sr^{-1}$. A halo is detected, but at a much higher surface brightness than our models of recombination emission and dust scattering predict. Only collisional excitation of Ly$beta$ with partial de-excitation to H$alpha$ could explain such amplitudes. We show that the halo seen is due to PSF scattering and thus not related to a real shell. We also investigated the feasibility of a spectroscopic detection of high-velocity H$alpha$ gas towards the centre of the Crab nebula. Modelling of the emission spectra shows that such gas easily evades detection in the complex spectral environment of the H$alpha$-line. PSF scattering significantly contaminates our data, preventing a detection of the predicted fast shell. A real halo with observed peak flux of about $2times10^{-7} ergs s^{-1} cm^{-2} sr^{-1} $ could still be accomodated within our error bars, but our models predict a factor 4 lower surface brightness. 8m class telescopes could detect such fluxes unambiguously, provided that a sufficiently accurate PSF model is available. Finally, we note that PSF scattering also affects other research areas where faint haloes are searched for around bright and extended targets.
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The remarkable Crab Nebula is powered by an energetic pulsar whose relativistic wind interacts with the inner parts of the Supernova Remnant SN1054. Despite low-intensity optical and X-ray variations in the inner Nebula, the Crab has been considered
We will present our study of the flux and spectral variability of the Crab above 100 MeV on different timescales ranging from days to weeks. In addition to the four main intense and day-long flares detected by AGILE and Fermi-LAT between Sept. 2007 a
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