Running Chicken Nebula on the Seestar S30 Pro

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Running Chicken Nebula on the Seestar S30 Pro
The starless interior of the Running Chicken Nebula, IC 2944 // Deep Space Remote Observatories - Steve Mandel, Bob Fera, and Steeve Body
IC 2944
A view of the stellar nursery IC 2944 as seen from the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope in Chile. A new study by European scientists suggests that gravity played a role in saving the infant universe from a collapse induced by the Higgs boson.
Image credit: ESO
RUNNING CHICKEN NEBULA This image, acquired by the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at ESO’s La Silla Observatory in Chile, shows a glowing red image of the Lambda Centauri Nebula, also known as IC 2944, and sometimes called the Running Chicken Nebula. It is 6,500 light-years away, in the direction of the southern constellation Centaurus the Centaur. It is a cloud of hydrogen illuminated by hot, bright newborn stars glowing with ultraviolet light. The intense radiation from the stars excites the surrounding hydrogen cloud, causing it to glow red.
IC 2944 - Running Chicken Nebula
Stellar Nursery IC 2944
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Credit: ESO
Running Chicken Nebula IC 2944 in Hydrogen Alpha - March 16, 2017 by Joseph Brimacombe Via Flickr: Taken from Warrumbungle Observatory using an SBIG STL-11000 camera and Takahashi FSQ 106 telescope on a Software Bisque PME Mount. 130 x 1 min exposures; H-alpha filter