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A nebula (from Latin: "cloud";
nebulae or nebulæ, with ligature or nebulas) is an interstellar cloud of dust, hydrogen gas, helium gas and other ionized
gases. Originally nebula was a general name for any extended astronomical object, including galaxies beyond the Milky Way
(some examples of the older usage survive; for example, the Andromeda Galaxy was referred to as the Andromeda Nebula before
galaxies were discovered by Edwin Hubble). Nebulae often form star-forming regions, such as in the Eagle Nebula. This nebula
is depicted in one of NASA's most famous images, the "Pillars of Creation". In these regions the formations of gas,
dust and other materials "clump" together to form larger masses, which attract further matter, and eventually will
become big enough to form stars. The remaining materials are then believed to form planets, and other planetary system objects.
Nebula (Click on
photo's to enlarge)
History Evidence exists that the
Maya knew about nebulae before the invention of a telescope. Support for this theory comes from a folk tale that deals with
the area of the sky around the Orion constellation. The tale mentions there is a smudge around the glowing fire. Around
A.D. 150, Claudius Ptolemaeus (Ptolemy) recorded, in books VII-VIII of his Almagest, five stars that appeared nebulous. He
also noted a region of nebulosity between the constellations Ursa Major and Leo that was not associated with any star. The
first true nebula, as distinct from a star cluster, was mentioned by the Persian astronomer, Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi, in his
Book of Fixed Stars. He noted "a little cloud" where the Andromeda Galaxy is located. He also cataloged the Omicron
Velorum star cluster as a "nebulous star" and other nebulous objects, such as Brocchi's Cluster. The supernova that
created the Crab Nebula, the SN 1054, was observed by Arabic and Chinese astronomers in 1054.
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For reasons unknown, Al-Sufi failed to note
the Orion Nebula, which is at least as prominent as the Andromeda galaxy in the night sky. On November 26, 1610, Nicolas-Claude
Fabri de Peiresc discovered the Orion Nebula using a telescope. This nebula was also observed by Johann Baptist Cysat in 1618.
However, the first detailed study of the Orion Nebula wouldn't be performed until 1659 by Christian Huygens, who also believed
himself to be the first person to discover this nebulosity. In 1715, Edmund Halley published a list of six nebulae.
This number steadily increased during the century, with Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux compiling a list of 20 (including eight
not previously known) in 1746. From 1751–53, Nicolas Louis de Lacaille cataloged 42 nebulae from the Cape of Good Hope,
with most of them being previously unknown. Charles Messier then compiled a catalog of 103 nebulae by 1781, although his primary
goal in doing so was to avoid the false detection of comets.
The number of nebulae was then greatly
expanded by the efforts of William Herschel and his sister Caroline Herschel. Their Catalogue of One Thousand New Nebulae
and Clusters of Stars was published in 1786. A second catalog of a thousand was published in 1789 and the third and final
catalog of 510 appeared in 1802. During much of their work, William Herschel believed that these nebulae were merely unresolved
clusters of stars. In 1790, however, he discovered a star surrounded by nebulosity and concluded that this was a true nebulosity,
rather than a more distant cluster. Beginning in 1864, William Huggins examined the spectra of about 70 nebulae.
He found that roughly a third of them had the absorption spectra of a gas. The rest showed a continuous spectrum and thus
were thought to consist of a mass of stars. A third category was added in 1912 when Vesto Slipher showed that the spectrum
of the nebula that surrounded the star Merope matched the spectra of the Pleiades open cluster. Thus the nebula radiates by
reflected star light. Slipher and Edwin Hubble continued to collect the spectra from many diffuse nebulae, finding
29 that showed emission spectra and 33 had the continuous spectra of star light. In 1922, Hubble announced that nearly all
nebulae are associated with stars, and their illumination comes from star light. He also discovered that the emission spectrum
nebulae are nearly always associated with stars having spectral classifications of B1 or hotter (including all O-type main
sequence stars), while nebulae with continuous spectra appear with cooler stars. Both Hubble and Henry Norris Russell concluded
that the nebulae surrounding the hotter stars are transformed in some manner.
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