by Ann » Tue Sep 20, 2016 1:01 pm
The
Rosette Nebula! You got it!
And there is an open cluster inside the Rosette Nebula, too!
In fact, NGC 2244
is the cluster inside the Rosette.
I don't think the pink blob really looks like the Dumbbell Nebula, though.
Ann
Edit: I think I have found a better match for that "vertical elongated green thing in side an egg" than the Egg Nebula itself. It's the core of galaxy NGC 4261. Don't ask me why it isn't green, though, or why the APOD is green, if it is the same object. A problem is that I can't spot the small bright nucleus of the galaxy in the APOD.
The pink blob to the left of the eclipsed Moon is driving me crazy, though. I can't understand what it is at all. Let's consider some of its features:
1) It has a
bright ring of what looks like star clusters, like one of those nuclear-ring galaxies.
2) The interior part, inside the ring, is generally fainter than the ring. OK. That happens, as can be seen in the ring part of
Mayall's Object.
3) Its innermost part is the faintest and darkest part of the whole object! Come on! That
never happens in galaxies, certainly not in nuclear ring galaxies. All right, all right! I just found this galaxy,
Zwicky II 28. Amazing object. It's more or less the right color for the APOD blob, too. But I don't think its shape makes for a very good fit.
4) Unlike Zwicky II 28, the interior of the pink blob in the APOD is not empty. Instead, it sports an inner spiral shape of a kind that you almost never see anywhere else than in spiral galaxies. You don't see these inner spirals in planetary nebulas or in supernova remnants, and I can't think of an ordinary emission nebula with an inner spiral like that. Maybe possibly maybe you can see them in some early phase of star formation, but I can't remember seeing a picture of one. So I can't help thinking that this is a spiral galaxy, maybe similar to
the innermost part of barred spiral
galaxy NGC 1300.
What do you think?
Ann
The [url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3f/NGC_2244_Rosette_Nebula.jpg/290px-NGC_2244_Rosette_Nebula.jpg]Rosette Nebula[/url]! You got it! :clap:
And there is an open cluster inside the Rosette Nebula, too! :D In fact, NGC 2244 [i]is[/i] the cluster inside the Rosette.
I don't think the pink blob really looks like the Dumbbell Nebula, though. :(
Ann
[float=left][img2]http://www.astronomynotes.com/galaxy/n4261cre.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]NGC 4261. Photo: Hubble.[/size][/c][/float]Edit: I think I have found a better match for that "vertical elongated green thing in side an egg" than the Egg Nebula itself. It's the core of galaxy NGC 4261. Don't ask me why it isn't green, though, or why the APOD is green, if it is the same object. A problem is that I can't spot the small bright nucleus of the galaxy in the APOD.
The pink blob to the left of the eclipsed Moon is driving me crazy, though. I can't understand what it is at all. Let's consider some of its features:
1) It has a [url=https://cdn.spacetelescope.org/archives/images/thumb300y/potw1542a.jpg]bright ring of what looks like star clusters[/url], like one of those nuclear-ring galaxies.
2) The interior part, inside the ring, is generally fainter than the ring. OK. That happens, as can be seen in the ring part of [url=https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/564x/f4/44/75/f44475302e2b6919db3042ca21e0f592.jpg]Mayall's Object[/url].
3) Its innermost part is the faintest and darkest part of the whole object! Come on! That [i]never[/i] happens in galaxies, certainly not in nuclear ring galaxies. All right, all right! I just found this galaxy, [url=http://scitechdaily.com/images/Hubble-Image-of-Ring-Galaxy-Zw-II-28.jpg]Zwicky II 28[/url]. Amazing object. It's more or less the right color for the APOD blob, too. But I don't think its shape makes for a very good fit.
4) Unlike Zwicky II 28, the interior of the pink blob in the APOD is not empty. Instead, it sports an inner spiral shape of a kind that you almost never see anywhere else than in spiral galaxies. You don't see these inner spirals in planetary nebulas or in supernova remnants, and I can't think of an ordinary emission nebula with an inner spiral like that. Maybe possibly maybe you can see them in some early phase of star formation, but I can't remember seeing a picture of one. So I can't help thinking that this is a spiral galaxy, maybe similar to [url=http://www.cosmicastronomy.com/1300_5d.jif]the innermost part[/url] of barred spiral [url=http://cache2.allpostersimages.com/p/MED/21/2145/FVDCD00Z/posters/stocktrek-images-beautiful-barred-spiral-galaxy-ngc-1300-hubble-space-telescope.jpg]galaxy NGC 1300[/url].
What do you think?
Ann