Head of column No. 1 in Eagle Nebula
Enlarged view of the head of the largest of the three main pillars, Column 1. The head is almost transparent around the edges at near-infrared wavelengths, but there is still a substantial opaque core which even these near-infrared VLT observations cannot penetrate. The complex bluish nebulosity bisected by a dark lane near the tip is being lit up by the bright yellow star just below it, which appears to be very young and rather massive. Several of the much fainter stars to the right of and below this source are found to be associated with EGGs seen in the Hubble image, and these all have much lower masses. Finally, there is a faint streak of blue light emanating from from the tip of EGG 23, one of the darkest parts of Column 1, ending in a blue blob further north. An equal distance to the south of the EGG and off the head, there is another curving blue nebulosity. These features are also seen in the Hubble image, and may be part of a Herbig-Haro jet coming from a young star buried deeply in EGG 23 and invisible in this image.
Technical information: The region shown measures 1.9 x 2.8 light-years (0.6 x 0.9 pc). The intensity scalings have been adjusted to better show the young stars embedded in the head of each column. North is up and East left.
Bildnachweis:ESO/M.McCaughrean & M.Andersen (AIP)
Über das Bild
ID: | eso0142c |
Typ: | Beobachtung |
Veröffentlichungsdatum: | 20. Dezember 2001 |
Dazugehörige Veröffentlichungen: | eso0142 |
Größe: | 800 x 599 px |
Über das Objekt
Name: | Eagle Nebula, Messier 16 |
Typ: | Milky Way : Nebula : Type : Star Formation Milky Way : Star : Grouping : Cluster |
Entfernung: | 7000 Lichtjahre |
Constellation: | Serpens Cauda |
Kategorie: | Nebulae |
Bildschirm-Hintergrundbilder
Koordinaten
Position (RA): | 18 18 48.04 |
Position (Dec): | -13° 49' 11.83" |
Field of view: | 0.99 x 0.74 arcminutes |
Orientierung: | Die Nordrichtung liegt 0.4° rechts zur Vertikale |
Farben & Filter
Spektralbereich | Wellenlänge | Teleskop |
---|---|---|
Infrarot J | 1.2 μm | Very Large Telescope ISAAC |
Infrarot H | 1.65 μm | Very Large Telescope ISAAC |
Infrarot K | Very Large Telescope ISAAC |