The Lagoon Nebula, Messier object 8 (M8) or NGC6523, in the constellation of Sagittarius, as seen by the Kitt Peak 4-meter Mayall telescope in 1973. North is at the top.
Downloadable versions (see
NOAO Conditions of Use):
Minimum credit line: NOAO/AURA/NSF
(for details see Conditions of Use)
500 x 400 34 kb B&W JPEG
3000 x 2400 1.0 Mb B&W JPEG
3000 x 2400 7.0 Mb B&W TIFF
The Lagoon Nebula, Messier object 8 (M8) or NGC 6523, in the
constellation of Sagittarius, as seen by the Kitt Peak 4-meter Mayall
telescope in 1973. North is at the top.
The lagoon nebula glows with the red light of hydrogen (H alpha) excited
by the radiation of very hot stars buried within its center. Deep
within the cloud, dark filaments of obscuring matter emit strong
infrared radiation. Several peculiar variable stars in the nebula
occasionally flare up, increasing in brightness to some 25 times their
normal luminosity. The nebula is about 6500 light-years away and about
60 light-years across.
Return to:
nebulae page,
emission nebulae page.
Comments by e-mail to images@noao.edu