by Ann » Wed Jan 04, 2012 9:24 am
This is a great picture!
Note how the Milky Way star field is full of stars of a certain size. But as you go inside IC 10, the "large" Milky Way stars disappear, and instead you get sprinklings of small well-resolved stars, looking like colorful sprinkles on top of a cupcake. These "sprinkles stars" are small-looking because they are 2.5 million light-years away, whereas the Milky Way stars that we can see in Cassiopeia are, at most, a few thousand light-years away. The fact that many of the stars that are sprinkled across the face of IC 10 are almost the same brightness although they are differently colored shows, or so James D Wray argued in his book "The Color Atlas of Galaxies", that they are resolved supergiant stars. Undoubtedly some of the bright "clumps" here must be unresolved clusters, too. The delightful pink spots and clouds are of course emission nebulae.
We are seeing IC 10 through the curtain of dust in the plane of the Milky Way. The brightest blue star in the picture, to the lower left of IC 10, is a star with the watching-friendly name of TV Cas. Although the star is variable, it is classified as a main sequence star of spectral class B9. Such a star should have a negative B-V index, but that is not the case for TV Cas. Although the star is "only" about 500 light-years away, it is nevertheless suffciently far away to be significantly reddened by dust in the Milky Way. Imagine, then, how reddened IC 10 must be, since it is behind "the full curtain of dust" of the galactic plane of our galaxy.
IC 10 is seen close to the star farthest to the right in the "W"-shape of Cassiopeia,
Beta Cassiopeia. Almost directly to the lower left of Beta Cassiopeia is the reflection nebula
Van den Bergh 1. The reflection nebula is being lit up by blue main sequence stars of spectral class B. As you can see in the picture I linked to here, this is a star formation area. Two stars appear to be in the process of being born here, V376 and V633. But these are small stars, nothing like the giant stars that are being born in the churning dust of starburst galaxy IC 10!
Thank you for this great picture, Dietmar Hager and Torsten Grossmann!
Ann
This is a great picture! :D :D :D :D
[float=right][img]http://i.istockimg.com/file_thumbview_approve/10542906/2/stock-photo-10542906-sprinkling-sprinkles-on-cupcake.jpg[/img][/float]Note how the Milky Way star field is full of stars of a certain size. But as you go inside IC 10, the "large" Milky Way stars disappear, and instead you get sprinklings of small well-resolved stars, looking like colorful sprinkles on top of a cupcake. These "sprinkles stars" are small-looking because they are 2.5 million light-years away, whereas the Milky Way stars that we can see in Cassiopeia are, at most, a few thousand light-years away. The fact that many of the stars that are sprinkled across the face of IC 10 are almost the same brightness although they are differently colored shows, or so James D Wray argued in his book "The Color Atlas of Galaxies", that they are resolved supergiant stars. Undoubtedly some of the bright "clumps" here must be unresolved clusters, too. The delightful pink spots and clouds are of course emission nebulae.
We are seeing IC 10 through the curtain of dust in the plane of the Milky Way. The brightest blue star in the picture, to the lower left of IC 10, is a star with the watching-friendly name of TV Cas. Although the star is variable, it is classified as a main sequence star of spectral class B9. Such a star should have a negative B-V index, but that is not the case for TV Cas. Although the star is "only" about 500 light-years away, it is nevertheless suffciently far away to be significantly reddened by dust in the Milky Way. Imagine, then, how reddened IC 10 must be, since it is behind "the full curtain of dust" of the galactic plane of our galaxy.
IC 10 is seen close to the star farthest to the right in the "W"-shape of Cassiopeia, [url=http://www.uux.cn/attachments/2008/08/1_200808281045511IlVA.gif]Beta Cassiopeia[/url]. Almost directly to the lower left of Beta Cassiopeia is the reflection nebula [url=http://www.reinervogel.net/exotic/images/vdb1.jpg]Van den Bergh 1[/url]. The reflection nebula is being lit up by blue main sequence stars of spectral class B. As you can see in the picture I linked to here, this is a star formation area. Two stars appear to be in the process of being born here, V376 and V633. But these are small stars, nothing like the giant stars that are being born in the churning dust of starburst galaxy IC 10!
Thank you for this great picture, Dietmar Hager and Torsten Grossmann!
Ann