Pelican Nebula Ionization Front
What's happening to the
Pelican Nebula?
The light from young energetic stars is slowly transforming the
Pelican's cold gas to hot gas,
with the advancing boundary between the two known as an
ionization front.
Most of these bright stars lie off the top of the image,
but part of the bright ionization front crosses on the upper right.
Particularly dense and
intricate filaments of cold gas
are visible along the front.
Millions of years from now this nebula might
no longer be known as the
Pelican, as the balance and placement of
stars and gas will leave something that appears completely different.
The above image was taken with the
Mayall 4-meter telescope at
Kitt Peak National Observatory
in Arizona,
USA.
The large circular artifact below the image center is not real.
The nebula, also known as
IC 5070, spans about 30 light years and lies about 1800
light years away toward the constellation of
Cygnus.