by Ann » Mon Oct 25, 2010 3:44 am
I have been refraining from commenting on this picture because of the false colors (as you can imagine...), but even I think it is an impressive image. But I have been scratching my head to understand it. What drives the nebula? If it is a starforming region - and it is - then there must be a cluster of newborn hot stars providing the ultraviolet light necessary for the ionization of the nebula.
Well, where are the hot bright stars? Why are they so bashful? Why do they hide themselves?
There are a few bright stars scattered throughout the nebula. But they just don't look "right". For example, there is a bright star above the bright orange rim of the nebula, and the star is situated right above a finger-shaped pillar, too. But this star does not appear to have a retinue of smaller stars gathered around it at all, and look at the finger-shaped pillars below it! They aren't even lit up by the light from the star. No, this star has to be a foreground object. And indeed, according to my astronomy software, this bright-looking star is a modest K0 giant only about 300 light years away, ten times closer to us than the large nebula.
Well, you can see pillars almost all along the rim of the nebula, and they all seem to point at a small, unimpressive-looking cluster of small pinkish stars at the upper left. These stars are involved with some really dark nebulosity and aren't even able to light up this dust. Also, the stars all seem to be equally reddened - there is no "color gradient" among them to show which of them are more reddened by the dust than the others. Weird. But the pillars insist on pointing their fingers at this cluster as the ionizing source of the nebua, and the pillars are right. My astronomy software says that there is an O7 star among these little pinkies, and the star emerging out of the dust at the upper left of the cluster is a B0 star, if you are to believe my software.
So we've got a heck of a lot of impressive-looking nebulosity powered by a small group of unimpressive-looking stars. In reality I'm sure that the stars are very much brighter than the nebula.
Ann
I have been refraining from commenting on this picture because of the false colors (as you can imagine...), but even I think it is an impressive image. But I have been scratching my head to understand it. What drives the nebula? If it is a starforming region - and it is - then there must be a cluster of newborn hot stars providing the ultraviolet light necessary for the ionization of the nebula.
Well, where are the hot bright stars? Why are they so bashful? Why do they hide themselves?
There are a few bright stars scattered throughout the nebula. But they just don't look "right". For example, there is a bright star above the bright orange rim of the nebula, and the star is situated right above a finger-shaped pillar, too. But this star does not appear to have a retinue of smaller stars gathered around it at all, and look at the finger-shaped pillars below it! They aren't even lit up by the light from the star. No, this star has to be a foreground object. And indeed, according to my astronomy software, this bright-looking star is a modest K0 giant only about 300 light years away, ten times closer to us than the large nebula.
Well, you can see pillars almost all along the rim of the nebula, and they all seem to point at a small, unimpressive-looking cluster of small pinkish stars at the upper left. These stars are involved with some really dark nebulosity and aren't even able to light up this dust. Also, the stars all seem to be equally reddened - there is no "color gradient" among them to show which of them are more reddened by the dust than the others. Weird. But the pillars insist on pointing their fingers at this cluster as the ionizing source of the nebua, and the pillars are right. My astronomy software says that there is an O7 star among these little pinkies, and the star emerging out of the dust at the upper left of the cluster is a B0 star, if you are to believe my software.
So we've got a heck of a lot of impressive-looking nebulosity powered by a small group of unimpressive-looking stars. In reality I'm sure that the stars are very much brighter than the nebula.
Ann