Flase wrote:Aren't the colours of glowing nebulae defined by emission lines at specific frequencies? If you don't do anything but turn the brightness up and down, doesn't that keep these frequencies the same?
Yes. But our eyes base color on both wavelength and intensity. When you change the intensity, you change the color. Pure H-alpha, from a reference tube, looks like anything from pinkish-white to saturated red, depending on how bright the source is.
Am I wrong in thinking that elemental hydrogen is still the most common constituent of nebulae?
Absolutely. The total mass of even the dustiest nebula is overwhelmingly from atomic and molecular hydrogen, followed by helium. The mass of all that dust doesn't amount to more than one or two percent of the total.
Sorry I don't want to be rude about this picture. I'm just blunt and when I do say something's wonderful, it really means something. You know where you are with me.
I'm often blunt as well. I wasn't challenging your aesthetic opinion, which is, of course, quite validly your own. I was only pointing out that this image isn't "false color" in the sense that term is applied to astronomical images.
[quote="Flase"]Aren't the colours of glowing nebulae defined by emission lines at specific frequencies? If you don't do anything but turn the brightness up and down, doesn't that keep these frequencies the same?[/quote]
Yes. But our eyes base color on both wavelength and intensity. When you change the intensity, you change the color. Pure H-alpha, from a reference tube, looks like anything from pinkish-white to saturated red, depending on how bright the source is.
[quote]Am I wrong in thinking that elemental hydrogen is still the most common constituent of nebulae?[/quote]
Absolutely. The total mass of even the dustiest nebula is overwhelmingly from atomic and molecular hydrogen, followed by helium. The mass of all that dust doesn't amount to more than one or two percent of the total.
[quote]Sorry I don't want to be rude about this picture. I'm just blunt and when I do say something's wonderful, it really means something. You know where you are with me.[/quote]
I'm often blunt as well. I wasn't challenging your aesthetic opinion, which is, of course, quite validly your own. I was only pointing out that this image isn't "false color" in the sense that term is applied to astronomical images.