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AAO image reference AAT 44. « Previous || Next » ![]() Top left is NE. Image width is about 15 arc min Image and text © 1984-2002, Anglo-Australian Observatory, photograph by David Malin. This object is the only extra-galactic nebula which can be seen with the unaided eye. It is a faint patch of light at the eastern end of the Large Magellanic Cloud, 170,000 light years distant. A small telescope reveals narrow spindly tendrils of glowing gas which have been likened to the legs of a spider. The 'body' of the spider is the bright nebula seen at the centre of the photograph, while at its core is an extremely dense clump of very hot stars, until recently thought to a single, unusually massive star known as 30 Doradus. The very hot stars of 30 Dor are responsible for making the nebula visible. Click here for bigger image. Entry from NGC 2000.0 (R.W. Sinnott, Ed.) © Sky Publishing Corporation, 1988: NGC 2060 C+N 05 37.6 -69 10 r Dor neb, no descrip, in LMC NGC 2069 Nb 05 38.5 -69 05 r Dor F, L, E NGC 2070 C+N 05 38.6 -69 05 s Dor 40. 8.2 !!! vB, vL, loopedRelated Images AAT 68. The bright stars around 30 Doradus in the LMC UKS 15. The Large Magellanic Cloud UKS 14a. The eastern end of the Large Magellanic Cloud UKS 15. The 30 Doradus Nebula in the LMC UKS 15a. Around the 30 Doradus Nebula in the LMC UKS 28. The Henize 55 nebula in the LMC For details of photographic exposure, search technical table by AAT reference number. |
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