Astronomers have it pretty easy when we talk to the public. I may be biased, but I think
astronomy is the most beautiful of all sciences. Sure, other fields of science have lots of
eye candy, but all I have to do is pull out a shot of Saturn, and I win. Because Saturn.
It's ALL gorgeous. Planets, moons, stars, clusters…but of all of them, you just can't
beat a nebula. Why?
Because nebulae.
“Nebula” is Latin for “cloud” and for once in astronomy we have a name that
actually describes the object accurately. Nebulae are clouds of gas and dust in space.
I've already talked about them a bit. For example, stars form from nebulae; our Sun
did 4.6 billion years or so ago. When a medium-sized star dies, it blows off winds of gas, then
lights them up as the white dwarf core of the star is revealed, creating a planetary
nebula. Also, when a high-mass star explodes it catastrophically vaporizes itself, becoming
a violently expanding cloud of gas. Nebulae are literally part of the births, lives, and
deaths of stars.
So, besides being beautiful, they're also pretty versatile.
There are a lot of ways of categorizing nebulae. One way is by how we see them. For example,
if a cloud of gas is blasted by light from a nearby massive star, the gas in it becomes
excited; the electrons in its atoms jump to a higher energy level. When the electrons
drop back down, they emit light. The gas glows, and we call this an emission nebula.
The color of an emission nebula depends on the gas in it and how hot it is. Hydrogen,
for example, glows most strongly in the red, and we see that color in most emission nebulae.
Oxygen tends to glow green, but to a lesser extent it gives off blue light too.
Other elements span the spectrum in colors they give off.
And these colors aren't limited to visible light. Hydrogen can emit infrared and even
radio light, and if it's energized enough it'll emit in the ultraviolet, too. That's
true for many elements.
Although most emission nebulae look substantial, they're actually incredibly tenuous. A typical
density in a gas nebula is only a few thousand atoms per cubic centimeter. Mind you, in the
air you breathe there are about 10^19 atoms per cubic centimeter, a thousand trillion
times denser than a typical nebula! Really, a nebula is barely more than a vacuum.
The reason they look so cloudy is that they're big. Really, really big. A decent sized nebula is
several light years in diameter, and that's a LOT of centimeters. That much gas adds up,
and so some nebulae can be pretty bright.
While EMISSION nebulae glow due to their own light, REFLECTION nebulae are bright because
— can you guess? — they reflect the light of nearby bright massive stars. In this case
though the nebula isn't made of gas, but is instead mostly dust.
I don't mean like the hair and skin flake dust bunnies you find under your couch either.
When astronomers talk about dust, they mean tiny grains a micron across. Just so you know,
a human hair is 100 times wider than that! These tiny grains contain things like things
like silicates, aluminum oxide, and calcium. And in many cases this dust is laced with
complex molecules called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.
While I love that fancy name for them, you might know them better as… soot. Yup. When
you light a match you're pretty much making some of the same stuff that lurks between the stars.
Dust doesn't emit visible light. But it can affect the visible light from stars if
they're inside the dust cloud or nearby. Turns out,
dust is very good at scattering light. That means that when light hits it, the light gets
sent off in some other direction. This scattering is highly wavelength dependent, so blue light
is scattered very strongly, while red light can go right through.
We saw this in the last episode; the dust surrounding the Pleiades star cluster is a
reflection nebula. The light from the stars in the Pleiades is scattered by the nearby
dust, and the blue light light gets sent in every direction, including toward us. The
red light doesn't scatter nearly as well, so we don't see it; it never gets sent toward us.
Thick dust is also very good at absorbing visible light. If a star is embedded in enough
dust, the light from it is dimmed considerably. If the cloud is dense enough or big enough
the dust can completely extinguish the light seen from a star.
At the same time, if the dust is at the right density, the blue light from a star inside
a dust cloud gets scattered, while the red light can get through. This effect reddens
starlight, and in some dust clouds it provides a striking view: Stars outside the cloud look
normal enough, but closer in they get redder and redder, and then fade out entirely. The
result is a fuzzy, red-edged hole in space. Pretty cool.
You can see that effect in Barnard 68, a small dust cloud, just half a light year in size.
These are also sometimes called molecular clouds; they're cold enough that atoms can
stick together to form molecules. Their cores can be hundreds of degrees below 0 Celsius.
Some dust clouds like this are relatively small, but others get downright huge. We call
these giant molecular clouds, because why not. These can be incredibly massive, with
thousands or hundreds of thousands of times the mass of the Sun, and stretch for hundreds
of light years.
And that brings us to one of the most glorious objects in the sky: the Orion Nebula. This
is an emission nebula located just below Orion's belt. It's actually a naked-eye object,
visible in modestly dark skies. It looks like a star by eye, but even binoculars reveal
it to be fuzzy, and through a telescope, or with long exposure images, you get unmitigated majesty.
The Orion Nebula is a star-forming factory; a bunch of stars have been born in it. Some
of them are very massive and incredibly luminous. The entire nebula is lit by four stars located
in its heart, collectively called the Trapezium. These are four brutes; huge, brilliant stars
that are each far more massive than the Sun. Their light is so fierce it illuminates the
entire nebula, which is about 20 light years across.
And here's a funny thing about Orion: What you're seeing is not just a gas cloud in
space. It's actually just a bubble sitting on the edge of a much, MUCH larger molecular
cloud, hundreds of light years across. That cloud is cold and dark, and so we don't see
it by eye. The Trapezium stars formed inside that cloud, very near the edge. When they
turned on, fusing hydrogen into helium, they started blasting out a mind-numbing amount
of ultraviolet light, which began eating away at the gas and dust. Eventually, they blew
a hole in the side of the cloud, like a weak spot in a bicycle tire blowing out.
What we see as the magnificent Orion Nebula is just a dimple, a cavity, in the side of
the cloud, filled with gas heated to glowing by the stars.
There are still stars forming there today, too. I mean literally, right now. We can see it happening!
In Episode 9, I talked about the solar system, and how it starts off as a flattened disk
of gas and dust. When we look at the Orion Nebula with Hubble, WE SEE THOSE DISKS. They're
called protoplanetary disks and they're so dense they absorb almost all the light
from the stars forming inside them, so they're dark, and we see them in silhouette against
the brighter gas of the nebula.
Unless you look in the infrared. That kind of light can pierce the dark disk, and when
we use infrared telescopes we can see the protostars forming in the centers of those
disks. Take a good look: THOSE ARE BABY STARS, literally stars that are forming right this
very minute. They're still hot due to their contraction, but in a few million years they'll
ignite fusion in their cores, and become real stars. They'll blow away the remaining material
around them, revealing themselves, and perhaps any planets orbiting them as well.
In fact, once stars start forming inside a nebula, its days are numbered. The Eagle Nebula
is another star factory, with active star birth going on inside of it. Some of these
are massive, luminous stars, and give off so much ultraviolet light it erodes away at
the surrounding nebula, in a process called photoevaporation. However, dense knots of
material forming new stars can resist that erosion better, and protect the material behind
them, in essence shadowing it. This results in long fingers of material we
see in silhouette against the hotter gas, like sandbars in a stream. Observing their
infrared light, we can also see the stars embedded inside them.
There are several of these giant towers in the Eagle Nebula, three of which have been
called the Pillars of Creation. Stars are forming at their tips. Eventually, though,
the light from the massive stars will win, zapping away at the structures, dissolving
them. There's also some very hot gas in the nebula that might be the result of a star
that has already exploded; if so, then the pillars REALLY don't have long to live.
In a few thousands years they won't be eroded away, they'll be BLASTED away.
In a lot of nebulae there's no sharp edge; they just kinda fade away. Sometimes that's
because the gas thins out, so there's not enough stuff there to get lit and see. Other
times it's because there's just one or maybe a few stars lighting up the whole cloud,
and at some distance from them the starlight fades and can't illuminate the gas anymore.
But sometimes nebulae do have sharp edges. That usually happens when a gas cloud is expanding,
like in a planetary nebula or supernova. The gas slams into the much thinner gas that is
strewn between the stars, what we call the interstellar medium. The expanding gas piles
up like snow in a snowplow, getting denser and glowing more brightly.
Gas inside a nebula can be in turmoil, too. Winds from stars compress the gas, shock waves
form when stars explode and when they're born. These can create lovely sheets, tendrils,
and filaments in nebulae as well.
All of these factors can come together to create great beauty. Not too far from the
Orion Nebula in the sky is another dark nebula, superposed on a bright emission nebula. By
coincidence, the dense dark material is shaped like a gigantic chess piece, and it's called
the Horsehead Nebula. It's being eroded by a star called Sigma Orionis, off the top
of the frame here, and that's also making the gas behind it glow in that sharp ridge.
One of my favorite nebulae in the sky is Barnard's Loop, a huge arc of material that's formed
either by the expanding gas from supernovae or the winds of all the massive stars being
born in the Orion complex. It's also the outer edge of a huge bubble surrounding a
substantial amount of real estate in the constellation Orion. In this image you can see both the
Orion and the Horsehead nebulae; the Loop is so big you could fit 25 full Moons across it!
One more thing: I've been talking about bright and dark nebulae, but that's an old
fashioned way of thinking of them. I've also mentioned that infrared light can get
through them, but remember from Episode 24 that the kind of light an object gives off
depends on its temperature. Clouds of dust that look dark to the human eye are actually
glowing if you observe them in the far infrared, well outside the colors our eyes can detect.
But we have telescopes that can see at these much longer wavelengths.
In Orion, there's a reflection nebula called M 78. Between M78 and Earth are long filaments
of very cold and dark dust, blocking the light from the reflection nebula behind and looking
like dark rivers running through it. But when you use a telescope that can see light with
a wavelength of a millimeter or so, that dust glows brightly, threading through M78 like ribbons of fire.
Like so much else in life, what you see really depends on how you see it. If there's a
life lesson there, feel free to take it.
Today you learned that nebulae are clouds of gas and dust in space. They can glow on
their own or reflect light from nearby stars. When they glow it's usually predominantly
red from hydrogen and green from oxygen, and when they reflect and scatter light it's
from massive hot stars, so they look blue. Stars are born in some nebulae, and create
new ones as they die. Some nebulae are small and dense, others can be dozens or hundreds
of light years across.
Also? They're incredibly beautiful.
Crash Course Astronomy is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Head over to their
YouTube channel to catch even more awesome videos. This episode was written by me, Phil
Plait. The script was edited by Blake de Pastino, and our consultant is Dr. Michelle Thaller.
It was directed by Nicholas Jenkins, edited by Nicole Sweeney, the sound designer is Michael
Aranda, and the graphics team is Thought Café.