Nebula

Many nebulae are visible due to fluorescence caused by embedded hot stars, while others are so diffused that they can be detected only with long exposures and special filters.Originally, the term "nebula" was used to describe any diffused astronomical object, including galaxies beyond the Milky Way.However, the first detailed study of the Orion Nebula was not performed until 1659 by Christiaan Huygens, who also believed he was the first person to discover this nebulosity.[14] This number steadily increased during the century, with Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux compiling a list of 20 (including eight not previously known) in 1746.[17][18] 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.[20] Both Hubble and Henry Norris Russell concluded that the nebulae surrounding the hotter stars are transformed in some manner.Examples of the latter case are planetary nebulae formed from material shed by a star in late stages of its stellar evolution.Massive stars may form in the center, and their ultraviolet radiation ionizes the surrounding gas, making it visible at optical wavelengths.The compact object that was created after the explosion lies in the center of the Crab Nebula and its core is now a neutron star.When a star has lost enough material, its temperature increases and the ultraviolet radiation it emits can ionize the surrounding nebula that it has thrown off.[25] Planetary nebulae are the remnants of the final stages of stellar evolution for mid-mass stars (varying in size between 0.5-~8 solar masses).[25] Planetary nebulae were given their name by the first astronomical observers who were initially unable to distinguish them from planets, which were of more interest to them.The gas falling inward either rebounds or gets so strongly heated that it expands outwards from the core, thus causing the star to explode.
True color image of the Trifid Nebula , showing complex gas and plasma structure
Portion of the Carina Nebula
An example of faint integrated flux nebula surrounding the star Polaris
The Carina Nebula is an example of a diffuse nebula
The Oyster Nebula is a planetary nebula located in the constellation of Camelopardalis
The Westbrook Nebula , a protoplanetary nebula.
Nebula (disambiguation)Trifid Nebulainterstellar mediumhydrogencosmic dustPillars of CreationEagle Nebulaplanetsplanetary systemlight-yearshuman eyeOrion NebulavacuumkilogramsT Tauriastronomical objectgalaxiesMilky WayAndromeda Galaxyspiral galaxiesVesto SlipherEdwin HubbleCarina NebulaPtolemyAlmagestconstellationsUrsa Majorstar clusterMuslim Persian astronomerAbd al-Rahman al-SufiBook of Fixed StarsOmicron VelorumBrocchi's ClustersupernovasCrab NebulaSN 1054Chinese astronomersNicolas-Claude Fabri de PeirescJohann Baptist CysatChristiaan HuygensEdmond HalleyJean-Philippe de CheseauxNicolas-Louis de LacailleCape of Good HopeCharles MessierMessier objectscometsWilliam HerschelCaroline HerschelWilliam Hugginsemission spectrumMeropePleiadesopen clusterGreat DebateO-type main sequence starsHenry Norris RussellNGC 604Triangulum Galaxygiant molecular cloudsstellar evolutionStar-forming regionsultraviolet radiationionizeswavelengthsH II regionphotodissociation regionRosette NebulaOmega NebulasupernovaTaurusneutron starplanetary nebulaered giantsionizewhite dwarfHerbig–Haroemission nebulaHorsehead Nebuladark nebulaCat's Eye Nebulaplanetary nebulaRed Rectangle Nebulaprotoplanetary nebulaSNR B0509-67.5Tycho Supernova remnant in X-ray lightSouthern Ring NebulaRing Nebulastar clustersH II regionsSupernova remnantsDark nebulaeHerbig–Haro objectsIntegrated Flux NebulaPolarisIntegrated flux nebulaegalaxyemission nebulaereflection nebulaespectral lineionizedinfraredOyster NebulaCamelopardalisasymptotic giant branchstar formationWestbrook Nebulaevolutionreflection nebulasupernova remnantnuclear fusiondiffuse nebulasynchrotron emissionelectronsmagnetic fieldsAnt NebulaBarnard's LoopBoomerang NebulaEskimo NebulaFox Fur NebulaHelix NebulaEngraved Hourglass NebulaLagoon NebulaPelican NebulaRed Square NebulaTarantula NebulaGum catalogRCW CatalogueSharpless catalogMessier CatalogueCaldwell CatalogueAbell Catalog of Planetary NebulaeBarnard CatalogueLynds' Catalogue of Bright NebulaeLynds' Catalogue of Dark NebulaeH I regionList of largest nebulaeList of diffuse nebulaeLists of nebulaeMolecular cloudMagellanic CloudsMessier objectNebular hypothesisOrion molecular cloud complexTimeline of knowledge about the interstellar and intergalactic mediumOnline Etymology DictionaryESO MessengerBibcodeQuarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical SocietyPhilosophical TransactionsBritish Journal for the History of ScienceNova remnantVariable nebulaGiant molecular cloudBok globuleEvaporating gaseous globuleSolar nebulaWolf–Rayet nebulaPulsar wind nebulaSupershellInterstellar cloudInfrared cirrusHigh-velocity cloudBipolar nebulaPinwheel nebulaLyman-alpha blobDiffuseLargest NebulaePlanetaryProtoplanetaryCometary knot