Panning across the 'Rosy' Nebula IC1284 in Sagittarius | ESO
This video sequence offers a close look at IC 1284, a nebula located about 5,500 light-years away in the constellation Sagittarius. In the center of a dark red background, the cloud of a bright red nebula glows. Meanwhile, in the bottom right corner, two smaller blue nebulae shine in contrast to the surrounding reddish hue. Dotted across the entire image, there are several large blue and white stars, as well as many faint white and yellow stars.
The large, bright emission nebula at the center, IC1284, is a star-forming region composed primarily of hydrogen. Its rosy glow comes from electrons within the hydrogen atoms. They are excited by the radiation from young stars, but then they lose energy and emit a specific color or wavelength of light. One of the filters on OmegaCAM lets through this particular reddish color, hence the nebula’s look.
Meanwhile, another color filter highlights the blue reflection nebulae NGC6589 and NGC6590 in the lower right corner. The dust in a reflection nebula preferentially scatters shorter, bluer wavelengths of light from nearby stars, which is what gives these nebulae their eerie glow. This is the same reason why the sky is blue!
Credit: ESO/VPHAS+ team.
Acknowledgement: CASU
Duration: 1 minute
Release Date: Oct. 2, 2023
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