Nestled within the dusty lanes of the Chamaeleon I molecular cloud, CED 110 glows as a faint reflection nebula illuminated by a cluster of young, newly formed stars. Unlike emission nebulae that shine from energized gas, this delicate structure reveals itself by scattering starlight off fine interstellar dust, producing a soft bluish hue. The region is rich with protostars and embedded infrared sources, making it an active laboratory for studying the earliest stages of stellar evolution hidden deep within cold molecular material.
Located roughly 500 light-years away in the southern constellation Chamaeleon, CED 110 is part of a broader network of dark clouds and faint nebulae that trace the structure of this nearby stellar nursery. Long-exposure imaging unveils intricate filaments of dust and subtle variations in brightness, shaped by stellar winds and gravitational collapse. Though faint to the eye, CED 110 offers a quiet but profound glimpse into the processes that give rise to stars like our Sun, emerging slowly from the obscuring veil of cosmic dust.
Nestled within the dusty lanes of the Chamaeleon I molecular cloud, CED 110 glows as a faint reflection nebula illuminated by a cluster of young, newly formed stars. Unlike emission nebulae that shine from energized gas, this delicate structure reveals itself by scattering starlight off fine interstellar dust, producing a soft bluish hue. The region is rich with protostars and embedded infrared sources, making it an active laboratory for studying the earliest stages of stellar evolution hidden deep within cold molecular material.
Located roughly 500 light-years away in the southern constellation Chamaeleon, CED 110 is part of a broader network of dark clouds and faint nebulae that trace the structure of this nearby stellar nursery. Long-exposure imaging unveils intricate filaments of dust and subtle variations in brightness, shaped by stellar winds and gravitational collapse. Though faint to the eye, CED 110 offers a quiet but profound glimpse into the processes that give rise to stars like our Sun, emerging slowly from the obscuring veil of cosmic dust.