A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
May 28, 2014
Cone Nebula, in NGC 2264
Stars are forming in the gigantic dust pillar called the Cone Nebula. Cones, pillars, and majestic flowing
shapes abound in stellar
nurseries where natal clouds of gas and dust are buffeted by energetic winds
from newborn stars. The Cone Nebula, a well-known
example, lies within the bright galactic star-forming region NGC 2264. The Cone was captured in
unprecedented detail in this close-up
composite of several observations from the Earth-orbiting Hubble Space Telescope. While
the Cone Nebula, about 2,500 light-years away in Monoceros, is
around 7 light-years long, the
region pictured here surrounding the cone's blunted head is a mere 2.5
light-years across. In our neck of the galaxy
that distance is just over half way from the Sun to its nearest stellar
neighbor, the Alpha Centauri star system. The
massive star NGC 2264 IRS, seen by Hubble's infrared
camera in 1997, is the likely source of the wind sculpting the Cone Nebula and
lies off the top of the image. The Cone Nebula's
reddish veil is produced
by glowing hydrogen gas.
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