by Ann » Thu Jul 22, 2010 9:26 pm
Beyond said:
bystander wrote:I think Robert Gendler's M20: The Trifid Nebula in Sagittarius is one of the best compositions of the Trifid I have seen.
I agree. Gendler manages to make this rather over-photographed object look brilliantly beautiful and fantastic.
Like everyone else, I, too, love Masoud's image, which is stunningly beautiful indeed.
Mark Sibole's image of M17 is not stunningly beautiful or even beautiful at all, in my opinion, but I like it. In the small version, I see a "face" in the nebula, with two black dots for eyes, a line for a mouth and a protrusion for what may be a rabbit ear!
I like another thing about Sibole's image, which is that it brings home the energy of the newborn young stars of this massive star formation region. The light blue or pale cyan part of M17 is caused by the "champagne flow" of this rich young cluster. I'm not absolutely sure what a "champagne flow" is, but I think it is the combined very strong stellar wind of the hot young stars, which causes an outflowing jet similar to the Earthly force that makes a champagne cork pop and sends it flying.
Ann
[s]Beyond said:[/s]
[quote="bystander"]I think Robert Gendler's M20: The Trifid Nebula in Sagittarius is one of the best compositions of the Trifid I have seen.[/quote]
I agree. Gendler manages to make this rather over-photographed object look brilliantly beautiful and fantastic.
Like everyone else, I, too, love Masoud's image, which is stunningly beautiful indeed.
Mark Sibole's image of M17 is not stunningly beautiful or even beautiful at all, in my opinion, but I like it. In the small version, I see a "face" in the nebula, with two black dots for eyes, a line for a mouth and a protrusion for what may be a rabbit ear!
I like another thing about Sibole's image, which is that it brings home the energy of the newborn young stars of this massive star formation region. The light blue or pale cyan part of M17 is caused by the "champagne flow" of this rich young cluster. I'm not absolutely sure what a "champagne flow" is, but I think it is the combined very strong stellar wind of the hot young stars, which causes an outflowing jet similar to the Earthly force that makes a champagne cork pop and sends it flying.
Ann