Beautiful colour images of nebulae grace astronomy books and websites and have spread to mainstream culture. They are now familar to the public but what are these gaudy celestial spectacles?
So what is a nebula?
Nebula is latin for òÀØcloudòÀÙ so it is the word astronomers use to call huge clouds in space. Note that historically it was used to describe any fuzzy-looking thing in the sky so older books, from say pre-1960, might call a galaxy nebula too but this isnòÀÙt done now.
Nebulae come in several types. Giant Molecular Clouds are the most common but least noticed because they donòÀÙt look very exciting, being big, dark and cold clouds of dust and gas. An example would be the Taurus Molecular Cloud. However some GMCs can become star-forming regions. These are quite literally stellar nurseries. In these cases the energy from new stars lights up the surrounding gases and they can look spectacular. Just take a look at the Carina Nebula (NGC 3372), if it wasnòÀÙt for all the new stars there it would be a murky dark mass, but just add their radiation and you get this amazing expanse of light and colour.
Can we see any? The Orion nebula is a very famous nebula and we know that it is full of stars. The stars form deep inside the nebula then as they light up radiation and particles flowing out of them blow away the surrounding gas and dust. Looking deep into the Orion Nebula with the Hubble Space Telescope reveals that the material is churning around in wonderful wispy patterns. This process will eventually disperse the nebula but in the course of it the nebula gets sculpted into weird shapes, like fingers, fairytale castles and so on. This is happening a bit in the Orion Nebula but is really noticeable in another famous one, the Eagle Nebula in the summer constellation of Serpens. There are some extraordinary spires of dust and gas there. The Carina Nebula isnòÀÙt as well-known but there are some lovely structures there. All of these are transitory features which will one day be gone.
What about other types of nebula? Planetary nebulae are another significant kind. The name is a historical accident as they have nothing to do with planets. These are the gravestone of dead stars. Basically when an average star is ending its life it blasts material from its surface in a series of outbursts (spread over many thousands or even millions of years). Even just the tiny (about the size of Earth) white-hot core of the star is left, surrounded by shells of glowing coloured gas.
What do planetary nebulae look like? Before I get to that, IòÀÙd better say that the material the star ejects doesnòÀÙt come out equally in all directions. This means as three-dimensional objects planetary nebulae are commonly shaped like barrels or hourglasses. When we see one from Earth we might see it end-on so it will appear as set of glowing concentric rings, like the Helix and Ring Nebulae, and this is how most people think of planetary nebulae. However seen from other perspective planetary nebulae can look very different, but they always give an impression of stuff exploding from a central source. A really good example is the Butterfly Nebula, which really does look like some stellar cataclysm.
Any other types of nebulae? Really big stars, ten or more times the size of the Sun, end their lives in one titanic explosion called a supernova. This is them literally blowing apart. Afterwards most of the stuff that made up the star expands into space in an enormous incandescent mass forming a type of nebula referred to as a supernova remnant. One recently formed object of this type is the Crab Nebula which is less than a thousand years old. As time marches on the debris from the exploded star spreads and thins out. An example of these older and more diffuse nebulae would be the Vela Supernova Remnant.
Nebulae come in in many forms but whatever their origin they are surely some of the great splendors of the Universe.
IT IS SO BEAUTIFUL I ONCE SAW THEM AT NIGHT.
When explaining what the dimensions of nebulae are you had an error. It said “when see….”
Just thought you would like to know, but I 100% agree with your last statement!
Thanks!
Thanks, I’ve fixed that!
This has a lot of great photos for Science Olympiad! Well, for the activity called Starry, Starry night!
Bella