by ANDY FLEMING
The glowing cloud Sharpless 2-296, part of the
Seagull Nebula. (Credit: ESO)
This new image from ESO shows a section of a
cloud of dust and glowing gas called the Seagull Nebula. These wispy red clouds
form part of the “wings” of the celestial bird and this picture reveals an
intriguing mix of dark and glowing red clouds, weaving between bright stars.
This new view was captured by the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre
telescope at ESO’s La Silla Observatory in Chile.
Running along the border between the
constellations of Canis Major (The Great Dog) and Monoceros (The Unicorn) in
the southern sky, the Seagull Nebula is a huge cloud mostly made of hydrogen
gas. It’s an example of what astronomers refer to as an HII region. Hot new
stars form within these clouds and their intense ultraviolet radiation causes
the surrounding gas to glow brightly.
The reddish hue in this image is a telltale sign
of the presence of ionised hydrogen. The Seagull Nebula, known more formally as
IC 2177, is a complex object with a bird-like shape that is made up of three
large clouds of gas — Sharpless 2-292 (eso1237) forms the “head”, this new
image shows part of Sharpless 2-296, which comprises the large “wings”, and
Sharpless 2-297 is a small, knotty addition to the tip of the gull’s right
“wing”.
These objects are all entries in the Sharpless
nebula catalogue, a list of over 300 glowing clouds of gas compiled by American
astronomer Stewart Sharpless in the 1950s. Before he published this catalogue
Sharpless was a graduate student at the Yerkes Observatory near Chicago, USA,
where he and his colleagues published observational work that helped to show
that the Milky Way is a spiral galaxy with vast, curved arms.
Spiral galaxies can contain thousands of HII
regions, almost all of which are concentrated along their spiral arms. The
Seagull Nebula lies in one of the spiral arms of the Milky Way. But this is not
the case for all galaxies; while irregular galaxies do contain HII regions,
these are jumbled up throughout the galaxy, and elliptical galaxies are
different yet again — appearing to lack these regions altogether. The presence
of HII regions indicates that active star formation is still in progress in a
galaxy.
This image of Sharpless 2-296 was captured by
the Wide Field Imager (WFI), a large camera mounted on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre
telescope at ESO’s La Silla Observatory in Chile. It shows only a small section
of the nebula, a large cloud that is furiously forming hot stars in its
interior. The frame shows Sharpless 2-296 lit up by several particularly bright
young stars — there are many other stars scattered across the region, including
one so bright that stands out as the gull’s “eye” in pictures of the entire
complex.
Wide-field images of this region of the sky show
a multitude of interesting astronomical objects. The young bright stars within
the nebula are part of the nearby star-forming region of CMa R1 in the
constellation of Canis Major, which is filled with bright stars and clusters.
Also lying close to the Seagull Nebula is the Thor’s Helmet Nebula, an object
that was imaged using ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) on ESO’s 50th
Anniversary, 5 October 2012, with the help of Brigitte Bailleul — winner of the
Tweet Your Way to the VLT! competition.
Original Source: European Southern Observatory


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