by Ann » Fri Oct 28, 2022 5:43 am
North America Nebula, IC 1396 (Elephant Trunk Nebula)
and Cocoon Nebula. Photo: Jolind of Astrobin.
Do click to see full size of the annotated APOD. As for the other image I posted,
the Cocoon Nebula was the APOD just two days ago, and I wanted to show you where tiny this nebula is in the sky. You can just barely - barely! - find it in the APOD at upper right.
The Cocoon Nebula is about twice as far away as the North America Nebula and IC 1396, so the Cocoon is not
quite as small as it appears to be when we compare it to nebulas that are much closer. Still, it
is tiny. And no wonder, since it is being ionized by a single star that isn't even spectral class O, but "just" B1. Actually, spectral class B1 is the lower "spectral class and temperature limit" where stars are able to ionize a red emission nebula.
Ann
[float=left][attachment=1]APOD 28 October 2022 annotated.png[/attachment][/float][float=right][attachment=0]North America IC 1396 and Cocoon Jolind.png[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]North America Nebula, IC 1396 (Elephant Trunk Nebula)
and Cocoon Nebula. Photo: Jolind of Astrobin.[/color][/size][/c][/float]
[clear][/clear]
Do click to see full size of the annotated APOD. As for the other image I posted, [url=https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap221026.html]the Cocoon Nebula was the APOD[/url] just two days ago, and I wanted to show you where tiny this nebula is in the sky. You can just barely - barely! - find it in the APOD at upper right.
The Cocoon Nebula is about twice as far away as the North America Nebula and IC 1396, so the Cocoon is not [b][i]quite[/i][/b] as small as it appears to be when we compare it to nebulas that are much closer. Still, it [b][i]is[/i][/b] tiny. And no wonder, since it is being ionized by a single star that isn't even spectral class O, but "just" B1. Actually, spectral class B1 is the lower "spectral class and temperature limit" where stars are able to ionize a red emission nebula.
Ann