by Ann » Sat Jul 08, 2017 6:33 am
MarkBour wrote:Ann wrote:... Finally, note the one blue object in the picture, a star near small-looking galaxy NGC 4217 at 5 o'clock. The blue star is HD 106420, a B8V star with a color index as blue as -0.125 ± 0.013. The absence of any other strikingly blue objects in the field is a reminder how rare these blue stars really are ... Ann
Thanks for pointing that out. I really like the contrast there among the three stars that are visually near each other. They appear white(ish), red, and blue to my eye.
I should have pointed out the very orange star next to the blue one, too. Just like the blue star, the orange one is unique in the field because of its color. My software has very little information about it, but I would guess, because of its color, that it is a M-type giant. M-type stars are not always very much more orange than the common-as-dirt early K-type giants, but they are
very much more infrared. Peter Feltoti mentioned an IR filter in his reply to me, which is why I think that the orange star is an infrared-bright M-type giant. These stars are quite rare. M-type dwarfs are terribly common, but they are so faint that they will not show up in the field of any "normal" galaxy image (unless a nearby one happens to position itself right next to a galaxy imaged by Hubble).
I should point out that the orange star in the field of M106 might be a K5III star, similar to
Aldebaran, rather than a M-type giant. They are (very) orange in color, but not at all as infrared as M-type giants.
But it appears to me that there are also some serious blue patches in M106 in the image as well (?)
M100 with blue star formation in dust lanes. Photo: Salvatore Grasso.
Oh, sure! But here we're seeing star formation in dust lanes in M106. That is a very common phenomenon in spiral galaxies - indeed, you will be hard pressed to find to find any bona fide spiral galaxy that doesn't have any blue patches at all in any of its dust lanes.
B-type stars of the Sco-Cen association.
Photo: Akira Fuji.
The stars that color (some) dust lanes blue are (relatively) numerous and typically much brighter than the surrounding stars. Take a look at the picture at right, which shows the Sco-Cen association of young stars. As you can see, the field is dominated by blue stars. Most of them are about 400 light-years away, and almost all of them are B-type stars. The brightest of them are up to 3,000 times as bright as the Sun in visual light. Seen from space, their combined light would form a "blue patch". (Note one orange star at lower right. That is Gacrux of constellation Crux, and it is, interestingly, an M-type giant. It does not belong to the Sco-Cen association, because it is only 90 light-years away. Also note a really bright white star at six o'clock. That is the most nearby star of them all from our vantage point, Alpha Centauri, four light-years away!)
The link in the "Image Credit" goes to a blog of Mr. Feltoti's, which is very nice (and has some of the data).
Thanks, I'll check it out!
Ann
[quote="MarkBour"][quote="Ann"]... Finally, note the one blue object in the picture, a star near small-looking galaxy NGC 4217 at 5 o'clock. The blue star is HD 106420, a B8V star with a color index as blue as -0.125 ± 0.013. The absence of any other strikingly blue objects in the field is a reminder how rare these blue stars really are ... Ann[/quote]
Thanks for pointing that out. I really like the contrast there among the three stars that are visually near each other. They appear white(ish), red, and blue to my eye. [/quote]
I should have pointed out the very orange star next to the blue one, too. Just like the blue star, the orange one is unique in the field because of its color. My software has very little information about it, but I would guess, because of its color, that it is a M-type giant. M-type stars are not always very much more orange than the common-as-dirt early K-type giants, but they are [i]very[/i] much more infrared. Peter Feltoti mentioned an IR filter in his reply to me, which is why I think that the orange star is an infrared-bright M-type giant. These stars are quite rare. M-type dwarfs are terribly common, but they are so faint that they will not show up in the field of any "normal" galaxy image (unless a nearby one happens to position itself right next to a galaxy imaged by Hubble).
I should point out that the orange star in the field of M106 might be a K5III star, similar to [url=http://www.greatdreams.com/constellations/aldebaran.jpg]Aldebaran[/url], rather than a M-type giant. They are (very) orange in color, but not at all as infrared as M-type giants.
[quote]But it appears to me that there are also some serious blue patches in M106 in the image as well (?)[/quote]
[float=left][img2]http://pbs.twimg.com/media/CYY3hIwWwAAuamg.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]M100 with blue star formation in dust lanes. Photo: Salvatore Grasso.[/size][/c][/float]Oh, sure! But here we're seeing star formation in dust lanes in M106. That is a very common phenomenon in spiral galaxies - indeed, you will be hard pressed to find to find any bona fide spiral galaxy that doesn't have any blue patches at all in any of its dust lanes.
[float=right][img2]http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~murphysj/img/press_scocen.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]B-type stars of the Sco-Cen association.
Photo: Akira Fuji.[/size][/c][/float]
The stars that color (some) dust lanes blue are (relatively) numerous and typically much brighter than the surrounding stars. Take a look at the picture at right, which shows the Sco-Cen association of young stars. As you can see, the field is dominated by blue stars. Most of them are about 400 light-years away, and almost all of them are B-type stars. The brightest of them are up to 3,000 times as bright as the Sun in visual light. Seen from space, their combined light would form a "blue patch". (Note one orange star at lower right. That is Gacrux of constellation Crux, and it is, interestingly, an M-type giant. It does not belong to the Sco-Cen association, because it is only 90 light-years away. Also note a really bright white star at six o'clock. That is the most nearby star of them all from our vantage point, Alpha Centauri, four light-years away!)
[quote]The link in the "Image Credit" goes to a blog of Mr. Feltoti's, which is very nice (and has some of the data).
[/quote]
Thanks, I'll check it out!
Ann