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View of The Running Chicken Nebula from South America | ESO

View of The Running Chicken Nebula from South America | ESO

The most obvious deep-sky objects in this image include the Carina Nebula, glowing intensely red in the middle of the image. The Carina Nebula lies in the constellation of Carina (The Keel), about 7,500 light-years from Earth. This cloud of glowing gas and dust is the brightest nebula in the sky and contains several of the brightest and most massive stars known in the Milky Way, such as Eta Carinae. The Carina Nebula is a perfect test-bed for astronomers to unveil the mysteries of the violent birth and death of massive stars. 

Below the Carina Nebula, we see the Wishing Well Cluster (NGC 3532). This open cluster of young stars was named because, through a telescope’s eyepiece, it looks like a handful of silver coins twinkling at the bottom of a wishing well. Further to the right, we find the Running Chicken Nebula (IC 2944), from a bird-like shape that some people see in its brightest region. Above this nebula and slightly to the left we find the Southern Pleiades (IC 2632), an open cluster of stars that is similar to its more familiar northern namesake.

In the foreground, we see three of the four Auxiliary Telescopes (ATs) of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). Using the VLTI, the ATs—or the VLT’s 8.2-meter Unit Telescopes—can be used together as a single giant telescope which can see finer details than would be possible with the individual telescopes. The VLTI has been used for a broad range of research including the study of circumstellar discs around young stellar objects and of active galactic nuclei, one of the most energetic and mysterious phenomena in the Universe.


Credit: European Southern Observatory (ESO)/B. Tafreshi

Release Date: November 12, 2012


#NASA #ESO #Astronomy #Space #Science #Stars #Nebula #EmissionNebula #IC2944 #RunningChickenNebula #Centaurus #Constellation #Cosmos #Universe #Telescopes #VLT #VLTI #Astrophotography #Chile #Europe #STEM #Education

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