NGC 4372 and the Dark Doodad
Image Credit &
Copyright:
Matias Tomasello
The delightful Dark Doodad Nebula drifts
through southern skies,
a tantalizing target for binoculars toward the small constellation
Musca, The Fly.
The dusty cosmic cloud
is seen against rich starfields just south of the
Coalsack Nebula and the Southern Cross.
Stretching for about 3 degrees across the center of
this telephoto field of view,
the Dark Doodad
is punctuated near its southern tip (upper right) by yellowish
globular star cluster
NGC 4372.
Of course NGC 4372 roams the halo of
our Milky Way Galaxy,
a background object some 20,000 light-years away and only
by chance along our line-of-sight to the Dark Doodad.
The Dark Doodad's well defined silhouette belongs to the
Musca molecular
cloud, but its better known alliterative moniker was first
coined by
astro-imager and writer
Dennis di Cicco in 1986 while
observing Comet Halley from the Australian outback.
The Dark Doodad is around 700 light-years distant
and over 30 light-years long.