The
interstellar cloud of dust and gas captured in this sharp telescopic snapshot
is seen to change its appearance noticeably over periods as short as a few
weeks. Discovered over 200 years ago and cataloged as NGC 2261, bright star R
Monocerotis lies at the tip of the fan-shaped nebula. About one light-year
across and 2500 light-years away, NGC 2261 was studied early last century by astronomer Edwin Hubble
and the mysterious cosmic cloud is now more famous as Hubble’s Variable Nebula.
So what makes Hubble’s nebula vary? NGC 2261 is composed of a dusty reflection nebula fanning out from the star R Monocerotis. The leading variability
explanation holds
that dense knots of obscuring dust pass close to R Mon and cast moving shadows across the dust clouds in the rest of Hubble’s Variable
Nebula.
Image & info via APOD
Image Credit & Copyright: Tommy Lease (Denver Astronomical Society)
Source: The
Variable Nebula NGC 2261 – Scents of Science
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