Halloween and the Ghost Head Nebula
			
		
		
		
			Halloween's origin is ancient and astronomical.  
Since the fifth century BC, 
Halloween 
has been celebrated as a 
cross-quarter day, a day halfway between an 
equinox (equal day / equal night) and a 
solstice 
(minimum day / maximum night in the northern hemisphere).  
With our 
modern calendar, however, the real 
cross-quarter day will occur next week.  
Another cross-quarter day is 
Groundhog's Day.
Halloween's modern celebration retains 
historic roots 
in dressing to scare away the spirits of the dead.  
Perhaps a fitting modern tribute to this ancient holiday is the 
above-pictured Ghost Head Nebula taken with the 
Hubble Space Telescope.  
Appearing similar to the icon of a
fictional 
ghost, 
NGC 2080 is actually a 
star forming region in the 
Large Magellanic Cloud, 
a satellite galaxy of our own 
Milky Way Galaxy.  
The Ghost Head Nebula spans about 50 
light-years and is shown in representative colors.