Irregular Nebulæ.

376. Irregular Forms.—Besides the more or less regular forms of nebulæ which have been classified as indicated above, there are many of very irregular shapes, and some of these are the most remarkable nebulæ in the heavens. Fig. 437 shows a curiously shaped nebula, seen by Sir John Herschel in the southern heavens; and Fig. 438, one in Taurus, known as the Crab nebula.

Fig. 437.

Fig. 438.

377. The Great Nebula of Andromeda.—This is one of the few nebulæ that are visible to the naked eye. We see at a glance that it is not a star, but a mass of diffused light. Indeed, it has sometimes been very naturally mistaken for a comet. It was first described by Marius in 1614, who compared its light to that of a candle shining through horn. This gives a very good idea of the impression it produces, which is that of a translucent object illuminated by a brilliant light behind it. With a small telescope it is easy to imagine it to be a solid like horn; but with a large one the effect is more like fog or mist with a bright body in its midst. Unlike most of the nebulæ, its spectrum is a continuous one, similar to that from a heated solid, indicating that the light emanates, not from a glowing gas, but from matter in the solid or liquid state. This would suggest that it is really an immense star-cluster, so distant that the highest telescopic power cannot resolve it; yet in the largest telescopes it looks less resolvable, and more like a gas, than in those of moderate size. If it is really a gas, and if the spectrum is continuous throughout the whole extent of the nebula, either it must shine by reflected light, or the gas must be subjected to a great pressure almost to its outer limit, which is hardly possible. If the light is reflected, we cannot determine whether it comes from a single bright star, or a number of small ones scattered through the nebula.

With a small telescope this nebula appears elliptical, as in Fig. 439. Fig. 440 shows it as it appeared to Bond, in the Cambridge refractor.

Fig. 439.