IC 2944 is a large emission nebula located about 6,500 light-years from Earth in the constellation Centaurus. It is sometimes called the Running Chicken Nebula because the brightest part of the gas clouds forms a shape that resembles a running chicken in photographs. The nebula glows red because young, hot stars inside it emit strong ultraviolet radiation that ionizes the surrounding hydrogen gas. When the electrons in the hydrogen recombine, they release energy as visible red light, which is why many star-forming nebulae like IC 2944 appear bright in long-exposure images.
One of the most interesting features of IC 2944 is a set of dark clouds known as Thackeray’s Globules. These small, dense pockets of gas and dust appear as black silhouettes against the bright nebula. Astronomers once thought they might be forming new stars, but studies suggest many of them may actually be evaporating under the intense radiation from nearby massive stars. IC 2944 is therefore an important region for studying how massive stars interact with and shape the gas clouds where stars are born.
IC 2944 is a large emission nebula located about 6,500 light-years from Earth in the constellation Centaurus. It is sometimes called the Running Chicken Nebula because the brightest part of the gas clouds forms a shape that resembles a running chicken in photographs. The nebula glows red because young, hot stars inside it emit strong ultraviolet radiation that ionizes the surrounding hydrogen gas. When the electrons in the hydrogen recombine, they release energy as visible red light, which is why many star-forming nebulae like IC 2944 appear bright in long-exposure images.
One of the most interesting features of IC 2944 is a set of dark clouds known as Thackeray’s Globules. These small, dense pockets of gas and dust appear as black silhouettes against the bright nebula. Astronomers once thought they might be forming new stars, but studies suggest many of them may actually be evaporating under the intense radiation from nearby massive stars. IC 2944 is therefore an important region for studying how massive stars interact with and shape the gas clouds where stars are born.