The
constellation of Orion
holds much more than three stars in a row. A deep exposure shows
everything from dark nebula to star clusters,
all imbedded in an extended
patch
of
gaseous
wisps in the greater
OrionMolecularCloudComplex.
The
brightest three stars on the far left are indeed the
famous
three stars that make up the
belt
of Orion. Just below Alnitak,
the lowest of the
three
belt stars, is the
Flame
Nebula, glowing with
excited
hydrogen gas and immersed in
filaments of dark brown dust. Below the frame center and just to the
right of
Alnitak
lies the
Horsehead
Nebula, a dark
indentation of
dense
dust that has perhaps the most
recognized nebular shapes on the sky.
On the upper right lies
M42,
the
Orion
Nebula,
an energetic caldron of tumultuous
gas,
visible to the unaided
eye,
that is giving birth to a
new
open cluster of stars.
Immediately to the left of
M42
is a prominent bluish reflection nebula sometimes called the
Running
Man that houses many bright blue
stars. The
above
image, a digitally stitched
composite taken over several nights, covers an area with objects that
are roughly 1,500
light
years away and spans about 75
light years.