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This page describes an image The LDN 483 Dark Nebula

تنزيل الملف ( صورة 31.01 MB)

شرح الصورة: This image shows a dark molecular cloud known as LDN 483, captured by the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at the La Silla Observatory in Chile. At first glance, the patch of sky looks like a region where stars are missing, but the effect is due to interstellar extinction — dust and gas within LDN 483 absorb and scatter light from background stars, making them appear faint or invisible to telescopes that observe visible light. Interstellar extinction is the dimming of light from distant objects caused by dust and gas between the object and the observer, a common phenomenon in astronomy that must be accounted for when measuring stellar brightness and color.

Dark nebulae like LDN 483 are dense concentrations of interstellar matter located within our Milky Way Galaxy. This particular cloud lies about 700 light-years from Earth in the constellation Serpens and contains enough material to block most visible light from stars behind it. Because dust grains preferentially scatter shorter (bluer) wavelengths of light, extinction can also make objects appear redder than they truly are — a related effect known as interstellar reddening. Understanding and correcting for extinction is essential for astronomers to reveal the true brightness, distance, and physical properties of celestial objects seen through dusty regions of space.
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مصدر الصورة: ESO رابط المصدر

مصطلحات معجم ذات صلة: الاعتتام بين النجوم , السديم المظلم , الوسط بين النجمي

ترخيص الصورة: المشاع الإبداعي نَسب المُصنَّف 4.0 دولي (CC BY 4.0) المشاع الإبداعي نَسب المُصنَّف 4.0 دولي (CC BY 4.0) أيقونات

تمّت كتابة وترجمة ومراجعة تسميات ملفات الوسائط المعروضة على موقع OAE من خلال جهد جماعي من قِبل OAE، ومراكز وعُقد OAE، والمنسقين الوطنيين لتعليم الفلك (NAECs)، ومتطوعين آخرين. يمكنك الاطلاع على القائمة الكاملة للجهات المشاركة في مشروع الترجمة هنا. تُنشر جميع تسميات ملفات الوسائط بموجب رخصة Creative Commons CC BY-4.0 ويجب نسبها إلى "IAU OAE". أما ملفات الوسائط نفسها فقد تخضع لتراخيص مختلفة (انظر أعلاه) ويجب نسبها كما هو موضح في قسم "الحقوق".

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الإنجليزيّة
شرح الصورة: This image shows a dark molecular cloud known as LDN 483, captured by the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at the La Silla Observatory in Chile. At first glance, the patch of sky looks like a region where stars are missing, but the effect is due to interstellar extinction — dust and gas within LDN 483 absorb and scatter light from background stars, making them appear faint or invisible to telescopes that observe visible light. Interstellar extinction is the dimming of light from distant objects caused by dust and gas between the object and the observer, a common phenomenon in astronomy that must be accounted for when measuring stellar brightness and color.

Dark nebulae like LDN 483 are dense concentrations of interstellar matter located within our Milky Way Galaxy. This particular cloud lies about 700 light-years from Earth in the constellation Serpens and contains enough material to block most visible light from stars behind it. Because dust grains preferentially scatter shorter (bluer) wavelengths of light, extinction can also make objects appear redder than they truly are — a related effect known as interstellar reddening. Understanding and correcting for extinction is essential for astronomers to reveal the true brightness, distance, and physical properties of celestial objects seen through dusty regions of space.
مصدر الصورة: ESO
مصطلحات معجم ذات صلة: Dark Nebula , Interstellar Extinction , Interstellar Medium

الإيطاليّة
شرح الصورة: Questa immagine mostra una nube molecolare scura nota come LDN 483, ripresa dalla Wide Field Imager installata sul telescopio MPG/ESO da 2,2 metri presso l’Osservatorio di La Silla in Cile. A prima vista, quella porzione di cielo sembra una regione priva di stelle, ma l’effetto è dovuto all’estinzione interstellare: la polvere e il gas all’interno di LDN 483 assorbono e diffondono la luce delle stelle sullo sfondo, rendendole deboli o invisibili ai telescopi che osservano la luce visibile. L'estinzione interstellare è l'attenuazione della luce proveniente da oggetti lontani causata dalla polvere e dal gas presenti tra l'oggetto e l'osservatore, un fenomeno comune in astronomia di cui si deve tenere conto quando si misurano la luminosità e il colore delle stelle.

Le nebulose scure come LDN 483 sono dense concentrazioni di materia interstellare situate all'interno della nostra galassia, la Via Lattea. Questa particolare nube si trova a circa 700 anni luce dalla Terra nella costellazione del Serpente e contiene materiale sufficiente a bloccare la maggior parte della luce visibile proveniente dalle stelle che si trovano dietro di essa. Poiché i granelli di polvere diffondono preferibilmente le lunghezze d'onda più corte (più blu) della luce, l'estinzione può anche far apparire gli oggetti più rossi di quanto non siano in realtà — un effetto correlato noto come arrossamento interstellare. Comprendere e correggere l'estinzione è essenziale per gli astronomi per rivelare la vera luminosità, la distanza e le proprietà fisiche degli oggetti celesti osservati attraverso regioni polverose dello spazio.
مصدر الصورة: ESO
مصطلحات معجم ذات صلة: Estinzione interstellare , Mezzo interstellare , Nebulosa Oscura
حالة ترجمة الشرح: لم تتم الموافقة من قبل مُراجع بعد
مترجمو الشروح: Giuliana Giobbi