stars planets meteors..... pretty much any thing in our galaxy
A diffuse mass of interstellar dust and gas is known as a nebula. Nebulae are often regions where new stars are forming, as the dust and gas are the raw materials from which stars are born. They can vary in size, shape, and composition.
"Nebula" is a singular word. It refers to a cloud of gas and dust in space. "Nebulae" is the plural form of the word.
Nebulae form in regions of space where gas and dust accumulate, often in the interstellar medium. These areas can be triggered by various events, such as the explosion of massive stars (supernovae) or the collision of gas clouds. Over time, gravitational forces pull the material together, leading to the birth of stars and planetary systems within these nebulae.
Dark nebulae are formed when dense interstellar clouds of gas and dust block the light from background stars, creating a visible dark patch against the bright emission nebulae behind them. Gravitational forces can cause these clouds to collapse and form new stars within them over time.
A nebula is a region of interstellar gas and dust. Emission nebulae are clouds of ionized gas that allow red, blue, and violet light through. Generally, these nebulae appear reddish. Reflection nebulae are clouds of dust that simply reflect light from nearby stars. The dust particles of reflection nebulae usually only scatter blue light, so the appearance is blue. Other types of nebulae don't reflect light. Dark nebulae such as the Horsehead Nebula are so dense that they block light from other sources, such as background emission nebulae, reflection nebulae, or other stars.
A diffuse mass of interstellar dust and gas is known as a nebula. Nebulae are often regions where new stars are forming, as the dust and gas are the raw materials from which stars are born. They can vary in size, shape, and composition.
Interstellar gas and dust.
"Nebula" is a singular word. It refers to a cloud of gas and dust in space. "Nebulae" is the plural form of the word.
Not yet - but in about 5 billion years - yes.
Nebulae form in regions of space where gas and dust accumulate, often in the interstellar medium. These areas can be triggered by various events, such as the explosion of massive stars (supernovae) or the collision of gas clouds. Over time, gravitational forces pull the material together, leading to the birth of stars and planetary systems within these nebulae.
Dark nebulae are formed when dense interstellar clouds of gas and dust block the light from background stars, creating a visible dark patch against the bright emission nebulae behind them. Gravitational forces can cause these clouds to collapse and form new stars within them over time.
A nebula is a region of interstellar gas and dust. Emission nebulae are clouds of ionized gas that allow red, blue, and violet light through. Generally, these nebulae appear reddish. Reflection nebulae are clouds of dust that simply reflect light from nearby stars. The dust particles of reflection nebulae usually only scatter blue light, so the appearance is blue. Other types of nebulae don't reflect light. Dark nebulae such as the Horsehead Nebula are so dense that they block light from other sources, such as background emission nebulae, reflection nebulae, or other stars.
Clouds of gas and dust in which stars form are called nebulae. These regions of space are where the raw materials for star formation gather and eventually collapse under their own gravity to give birth to new stars.
An interstellar cloud made of gas, dust, and plasma in a galaxy.
Nebulae are large clouds of dust and gas in space where stars are born. Within a nebula, gravitational forces can cause the gas and dust to collapse and form a protostar, which eventually ignites nuclear fusion and becomes a star. Therefore, nebulae are the birthplaces of stars, and stars are formed from the material within nebulae.
"Nebulae" is the plural form of the Latin word "nebula," which means cloud or mist. In astronomy, nebulae refer to massive clouds of gas and dust in outer space.
A nebula is a region of interstellar gas and dust. Dark nebulae such as the Horsehead Nebula are so dense that they block light from other sources, such as background emission nebulae, reflection nebulae, or other stars. Other types of nebulae do reflect light. Emission nebulae are clouds of ionized gas that allow red, blue, and violet light through. Generally, these nebulae appear reddish. Reflection nebulae are clouds of dust that simply reflect light from nearby stars. The dust particles of reflection nebulae usually only scatter blue light, so the appearance is blue.