NGC 1333

NGC 1333 is a region towards the constellation of Perseus that harbors newly formed stars less than one million years old. The density of gas and dust in this region is great enough to cause many different effects of illumination and emission. On the left side of this image the light of bright star is scattered and looks primarily blue. Other stars barely make there presence known due to the enveloping clouds of gas and dust. There are also several stellar outflows from the baby stars in this image and regions where the gas is glowing strongly red due to the copious amount of radiation some of these stars release.

This image was taken as part of Advanced Observing Program (AOP) program at Kitt Peak Visitor Center during 2014.

Créditos:

KPNO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/Jay Lavine and Ali Huang/Adam Block

About the Image

Id:noao-n1333lavine
Tipo:Observation
Release date:9 de Junio de 2014 a las 09:58
Size:1438 x 966 px

Sobre el Objeto

Nombre:NGC 1333
Constellation:Perseus
Categoría:Nebulae

Formatos de Imágenes

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323,7 KB
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Coordenadas

ObjectValue
Posición (AR):3 29 11.83
Posición (Dec):31° 23' 23.18"
Campo visual:12.37 x 8.29 arcminutes
Orientación:North is 53.7° left of vertical


Colores y Filtros

BandaLongitud de OndaTelescopio
Optical
B
438 nmVisitor Center 0.5-meter Telescope
Other CCD
Optical
G
475 nmVisitor Center 0.5-meter Telescope
Other CCD
Optical
R
625 nmVisitor Center 0.5-meter Telescope
Other CCD
Optical
Broad Band
555 nmVisitor Center 0.5-meter Telescope
Other CCD