The Cave Nebula

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What the heck is going on in and around the optically dark star-forming region of the Cave Nebula, sez you. Easy now. NASA’s orbiting Spitzer Space Telescope reveals the scene in four colours of infrared light. To wit:

The Cave Nebula, catalogued as Sh2-155, is quite bright in infrared, revealing details not only of internal pillars of gas and dust, but of the illuminating star cluster too – all near the top of the image. The red glow around the Cave’s entrance is created by dust heated by bright young stars. To the right is Cepheus B, a star cluster that formed previously from the same cloud of gas and dust. Other interesting stars of Cepheus come to light in infrared as well, including those illuminating an even younger nebula toward the image bottom, and a runaway star pushing a bow shock, tinged in red near the image centre. This region spans about 50 light years and lies about 2,500 light years toward the constellation of the King of Aethiopia (Cepheus).

(Image: NASAJPL-CaltachSpitzer Space Telescope)

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3 thoughts on “The Cave Nebula

  1. Slightly Bemused

    Last night I spent a lovely time perusing the skies, and particularly Jupiter and the Galilean moons, with my trusty binoculars. Sadly, the human eye cannot make out the wonderful colours shown in this photograph, and the others often paraded here. Nor can it explain what we are seeing without the help of overlaying image ranges.

    Thank you for that!

  2. Increasing Displacement

    I love how tiny and insignificant we are when such vast beauty exists so far away

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