Friday, January 25, 2013
APOD 3.2
This is the APOD from January 19, 2013. It is a picture depicting various things in the sky. The red glowing part is Barnard's loop which was shaped by supernova explosions and space winds. It is 300 light years wide and 1,500 light years away. In the center of it lies the Orion Nebula. The dusty part on the right is a molecular cloud that is about 2,400 light years away.
A gaze across a cosmic skyscape, this telescopic mosaic reveals the continuous beauty of things that are. The evocative scene spans some 6 degrees or 12 Full Moons in planet Earth's sky. At the left, folds of red, glowing gas are a small part of an immense, 300 light-year wide arc. Known as Barnard's loop, the structure is too faint to be seen with the eye, shaped by long gone supernova explosions and the winds from massive stars, and still traced by the light of hydrogen atoms. Barnard's loop lies about 1,500 light-years away roughly centered on the Great Orion Nebula, a stellar nursery along the edge of Orion's molecular clouds. But beyond lie other fertile star fields in the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy. At the right, the long-exposure composite finds NGC 2170, a dusty complex of nebulae near a neighboring molecular cloud some 2,400 light-years distant.
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