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A nebula (Latin: "mist"; pl. nebulae or nebulæ, with ligature) is an interstellar cloud of dust, gas and plasma. Originally nebula was a general name for any extended astronomical object, including galaxies beyond the Milky Way (some examples of the older usage survive; for example, the Andromeda Galaxy is sometimes referred to as the Andromeda Nebula).

Classification of nebulae


Nebulae can be classified by how they are illuminated:

Astrophysics of nebulae


H II regions are the birthplace of stars. They are formed when very diffuse molecular clouds begin to collapse under their own gravity, often due to the influence of a nearby supernova explosion. The cloud collapses and fragments, forming sometimes hundreds of new stars. The newly-formed stars ionize the surrounding gas to produce an emission nebula.

Other nebulae are formed by the death of stars; a star that undergoes the transition to a white dwarf blows off its outer layer to form a planetary nebula. Novae and supernovae can also create nebulae known as nova remnants and supernova remnants respectively.

See also


Nebulae | Space plasmas | Plasma physics

Мъглявина | Maglica | Nebulosa planetària | Mlhovina | Stjernetåge | Nebel (Astronomie) | Nebulozo | Nébuleuse | nebula | નિહારિકા | Nebuloso | Nebulosa | 星雲 | Nebula (Astronomia) | Nevels en gaswolken | Mgławica | Nebuloasă | Туманность | Hmlovina | meglica | Nebulosa | เนบิวลา | Kaasusumu | ערפילית | يۇلتۇزلار تۇمانى | 星云

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Nebula".

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