The Southern Cross

Shining in the southern sky, the four bright stars portrayed in the left part of this image represent a useful orientation mark which helps identifying the South Celestial Pole. Because of the rather distinctive asterism they form, these stars have been officially classified as the Crux constellation, or the Southern Cross.

The vast dark cloud, visible in the lower part of the image, is usually referred to as the Coalsack Nebula; it also has a preeminent role in the Australian Aboriginal culture, representing the head of an emu in the traditional constellation of the "Emu in the Sky".

The ruddy object glowing in the upper part of the image owes its colour to the blaze of hydrogen gas. Catalogued as IC 2948, this emission nebula hosts a sparkling cluster of young stars.

Kilde:

Om billedet

Id:yb_southern_cross_cc
Type:Foto
Udgivelsesdato:3. december 2009 23:22
Størrelse:3500 x 2323 px

Om objektet

Navn:IC 2948
Type:Milky Way : Star : Grouping : Cluster
Milky Way : Nebula : Appearance : Emission
Afstand:6000 lysår
Constellation:Musca
Kategori:Nebulae

Billedformater

Stor JPEG
4,3 MB
Skrærm JPEG
488,3 KB

Baggrundsbilleder

1024x768
613,4 KB
1280x1024
1,0 MB
1600x1200
1,4 MB
1920x1200
1,7 MB
2048x1536
2,2 MB

Koordinater

Position (RA):12 28 3.76
Position (Dec):-64° 53' 58.02"
Field of view:1473.79 x 978.17 arcminutes
Orientering:Nord er 73.4° venstre fra lodret