The Lemon cut cloud, otherwise called IC 3568, is a planetary cloud that is 1.3 kiloparsecs (4500 ly) far from Earth in the heavenly body of Camelopardalis (only 7.5 degrees from Polaris). It is a moderately youthful cloud and has a center breadth of just around 0.4 light years.[1][2] The Lemon cut cloud is a standout amongst the most basic nebulae known, with a flawlessly circular morphology. It seems fundamentally the same to a lemon, for which it is named. The center of the cloud does not have an unmistakably noticeable structure in arrangement and is generally made out of ionized helium.[3] The focal star is an extremely hot and splendid asymptotic red monster, and can be seen as a red-orange tone in a beginner's telescope.[4] A weak radiance of interstellar dust encompasses the cloud.