by Chris Peterson » Fri Nov 13, 2020 11:32 pm
Tarantulas are very nice wrote: ↑Fri Nov 13, 2020 10:31 pm
were the Tarantula Nebula closer, say 1,500 light-years distant like the local star forming Orion Nebula, it would take up half the sky
Imagine getting out of the cabin at night and seeing
that across half the sky. Our view of nature would perhaps be rather less arrogant, and astronomy would be taken seriously indeed.
(We'd have H-alpha eyes, the right atmosphere, and a high tolerance for being blasted by supernovae, OK?)
The problem is that even with 100% efficient eyes, you'd still need to stare at one spot in the sky for many minutes, and somehow integrate the photons your eyes were collecting, to see anything remotely like this.
In reality, if we were close enough to this to see it covering half the sky, it would look like a barely discernible gray haze, dimmer than the Milky Way.
[quote="Tarantulas are very nice" post_id=308067 time=1605306718]
[quote]were the Tarantula Nebula closer, say 1,500 light-years distant like the local star forming Orion Nebula, it would take up half the sky[/quote]
Imagine getting out of the cabin at night and seeing [i]that[/i] across half the sky. Our view of nature would perhaps be rather less arrogant, and astronomy would be taken seriously indeed.
(We'd have H-alpha eyes, the right atmosphere, and a high tolerance for being blasted by supernovae, OK?)
[/quote]
The problem is that even with 100% efficient eyes, you'd still need to stare at one spot in the sky for many minutes, and somehow integrate the photons your eyes were collecting, to see anything remotely like this.
In reality, if we were close enough to this to see it covering half the sky, it would look like a barely discernible gray haze, dimmer than the Milky Way.