In images of the complete Veil Nebula, even studious readers might not be able to identify the featured filaments.
Okay, that sounds like a veiled challenge to locate today's APOD in the APOD from 2019-10-31 (
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap191031.html).
And it does seem rather challenging. The lighting may be different, and by
a crudely estimated 1/35 field of view, the scales are vastly different.
Here's my guess, the tiny red rectangle in the image at the right.
But my confidence is low.
SpaceCadet wrote: ↑Mon Apr 05, 2021 5:57 am
How large is the nebula in total? What does 5 times the size of the full moon at 1400 light year's distance mean? Thanks
The image at the right shows the entire veil nebula. Astronomers had estimated that the wispy structure lies about 1400 light years away. Then, using geometry, since it covers about 2-3 degrees in angular diameter (5 times the angular diameter of the Moon), then it would have to be about 70 light years in diameter. My numbers are really approximate.
In fact, all of the above turned out to be very approximate. Wikipedia (at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veil_Nebula) notes that recent astrometric measurements have placed the nebula at a distance of 2400 light years, not just 1400 light years. If it is farther away, then it must actually be bigger. Instead of 70 light years in diameter, it must be 70 * (2400/1400) = 120 light years in diameter. (Again, I'm being very approximate. Wikipedia lists it as 130 light years.)
. . . But you could ask again tomorrow!
A fascinating fact at the end of the Wikipedia article:
The Veil Nebula is expanding at a velocity of about 1.5 million kilometers per hour. Using images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope between 1997 and 2015, the expansion of the Veil Nebula has been directly observed.
[quote]In images of the complete Veil Nebula, even studious readers might not be able to identify the featured filaments.[/quote]
Okay, that sounds like a veiled challenge to locate today's APOD in the APOD from 2019-10-31 (https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap191031.html).
[float=right][attachment=0]Capture.png[/attachment][/float]
And it does seem rather challenging. The lighting may be different, and by
a crudely estimated 1/35 field of view, the scales are vastly different.
Here's my guess, the tiny red rectangle in the image at the right.
But my confidence is low.
[quote=SpaceCadet post_id=312185 time=1617602232 user_id=144895]
How large is the nebula in total? What does 5 times the size of the full moon at 1400 light year's distance mean? Thanks
[/quote]
The image at the right shows the entire veil nebula. Astronomers had estimated that the wispy structure lies about 1400 light years away. Then, using geometry, since it covers about 2-3 degrees in angular diameter (5 times the angular diameter of the Moon), then it would have to be about 70 light years in diameter. My numbers are really approximate.
In fact, all of the above turned out to be very approximate. Wikipedia (at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veil_Nebula) notes that recent astrometric measurements have placed the nebula at a distance of 2400 light years, not just 1400 light years. If it is farther away, then it must actually be bigger. Instead of 70 light years in diameter, it must be 70 * (2400/1400) = 120 light years in diameter. (Again, I'm being very approximate. Wikipedia lists it as 130 light years.)
. . . But you could ask again tomorrow!
A fascinating fact at the end of the Wikipedia article:
[quote]The Veil Nebula is expanding at a velocity of about 1.5 million kilometers per hour. Using images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope between 1997 and 2015, the expansion of the Veil Nebula has been directly observed.[/quote]