Fig. 440.

378. The Great Nebula of Orion.—The nebula which, above all others, has occupied the attention of astronomers, and excited the wonder of observers, is the great nebula of Orion, which surrounds the middle star of the three which form the sword of Orion. A good eye will perceive that this star, instead of looking like a bright point, has a hazy appearance, due to the surrounding nebula. This object was first described by Huyghens in 1659, as follows:—

"There is one phenomenon among the fixed stars worthy of mention, which, so far as I know, has hitherto been noticed by no one, and indeed cannot be well observed except with large telescopes. In the sword of Orion are three stars quite close together. In 1656, as I chanced to be viewing the middle one of these with the telescope, instead of a single star, twelve showed themselves (a not uncommon circumstance). Three of these almost touched each other, and with four others shone through a nebula, so that the space around them seemed far brighter than the rest of the heavens, which was entirely clear, and appeared quite black; the effect being that of an opening in the sky, through which a brighter region was visible."

Fig. 441.

The representation of this nebula in Fig. 441 is from a drawing made by Bond. In brilliancy and variety of detail it exceeds any other nebula visible in the northern hemisphere. In its centre are four stars, easily distinguished by a small telescope with a magnifying power of forty or fifty, together with two smaller ones, requiring a nine-inch telescope to be well seen. Besides these, the whole nebula is dotted with stars.

In the winter of 1864-65 the spectrum of this nebula was examined independently by Secchi and Huggins, who found that it consisted of three bright lines, and hence concluded that the nebula was composed, not of stars, but of glowing gas. The position of one of the lines was near that of a line of nitrogen, while another seemed to coincide with a hydrogen line. This would suggest that the nebula is a mixture of hydrogen and nitrogen gas; but of this we cannot be certain.

Fig. 442.