by Ann » Thu Feb 10, 2022 6:17 am
T Tauri and Hind's Variable Nebula. Image Credit & Copyright:
Dawn Lowry, Gian Lorenzo Ferretti, Ewa Pasiak and Terry Felty
Closeup of T Tauri and Hind's Variable Nebula in today's APOD.
APOD Robot wrote:
The star with an orange tint near top center in this dusty telescopic frame is T Tauri, prototype of the class of T Tauri variable stars. Next to it (right) is a yellow cosmic cloud historically known as Hind's Variable Nebula (NGC 1555).
Wow! You could have fooled me. A "yellow" cosmic cloud next to T Tauri? When I first saw the image, I thought, Wow, I didn't know that there was a small pink emission hydrogen alpha cloud next to T Tauri!
Red supergiant star Antares and its yellow reflection nebula. Image: ESO/K. Ohnaka
But when I looked at a number of other images of T Tauri and Hind's Variable Nebula, I could see that both the star and the nebula do look orange to yellow-orange in all of them. The B-V index of T Tauri is +1.1, which is a lot redder than the Sun, whose B-V is between +0.6 and +0.7. So clearly Hind's Variable Nebula is another yellow reflection nebula, somewhat similar to (but very much smaller than) the Antares Nebula. I apologize for the white color of deeply yellow-orange Antares, which has been overexposed to a white color in the picture I posted.
Ann
[float=left][attachment=2]NGC1555texas2021_1094[1].jpg[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]T Tauri and Hind's Variable Nebula. Image Credit & Copyright:
Dawn Lowry, Gian Lorenzo Ferretti, Ewa Pasiak and Terry Felty[/color][/size][/c][/float] [float=right][attachment=0]T Tauri APOD February 10 2022.png[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]Closeup of T Tauri and Hind's Variable Nebula in today's APOD.[/color][/size][/c][/float]
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[quote]APOD Robot wrote:
The star with an orange tint near top center in this dusty telescopic frame is T Tauri, prototype of the class of T Tauri variable stars. Next to it (right) is a yellow cosmic cloud historically known as Hind's Variable Nebula (NGC 1555). [/quote]
Wow! You could have fooled me. A "yellow" cosmic cloud next to T Tauri? When I first saw the image, I thought, Wow, I didn't know that there was a small pink emission hydrogen alpha cloud next to T Tauri!
[float=left][img3="T Tauri and Hind's Variable Nebula (right). Image: Adam Block/Mount Lemmon SkyCenter/University of Arizona"]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/04/N1555s.jpg[/img3][/float][float=right][attachment=1]3840px--Zooming_in_on_the_red_supergiant_star_Antares.webm[1].jpg[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]Red supergiant star Antares and its yellow reflection nebula. Image: ESO/K. Ohnaka[/color][/size][/c][/float]
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But when I looked at a number of other images of T Tauri and Hind's Variable Nebula, I could see that both the star and the nebula do look orange to yellow-orange in all of them. The B-V index of T Tauri is +1.1, which is a lot redder than the Sun, whose B-V is between +0.6 and +0.7. So clearly Hind's Variable Nebula is another yellow reflection nebula, somewhat similar to (but very much smaller than) the Antares Nebula. I apologize for the white color of deeply yellow-orange Antares, which has been overexposed to a white color in the picture I posted.
Ann