Astronomy for Young Folks by Isabel Martin Lewis - HTML preview

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A Dark Nebula: The Dark Bay or Dark Horse Nebula in Orion

Taken with 100-inch Hooker Telescope of the Mt. Wilson Observatory

Millions upon millions of far distant suns equal to or surpassing our own sun in brilliancy are gathered within this vast encircling zone of the heavens, their combined light giving to the naked eye the impression of a milky band of light. Nine-tenths of all the stars, it has been estimated, lie close to the plane of the Galaxy, as well as all the vast expanses of luminous gaseous nebulæ and clouds of dark obscuring matter all seemingly intermingled in chaotic confusion; yet law and order govern the motions of all. Here also are the great moving star clusters such as the Pleiades and the Hyades and all of the brilliant "Orion" stars.

The structure of the Milky Way is not clearly understood but many astronomers believe there is evidence that it takes the form of a vast spiral nebula along whose arms the stars pass to and fro.

Beyond the Milky Way at enormous distances of many thousands of light-years, but apparently influenced by it, lie the globular star-clusters and the spiral nebulæ. The spirals appear to avoid the plane of the Milky Way for they are receding in the direction of its poles at high velocities; the globular clusters on the other hand are drawing in toward the Milky Way on either side, and in time will cross it.

Whether these objects external to the Milky Way form with it one enormous universe or whether the spiral nebulæ are in turn galaxies or "island universes," as the astronomer calls them, similar in form and structure to our own galaxy and at inconceivably great distances of millions of light-years from it, is still one of the riddles of the universe which the astronomers are attempting to solve.