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N44 in the Large Magellanic Cloud
(Central Region)
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Name: Large Magellanic Cloud, N 44
Description: H II Emission Nebulae
Position (J2000): RA 5hr 21m 37.89s Dec -67° 54' 42.77"
Constellation: Dorado
Distance: 170,000 light years
Field of view: 13.06 x 10.47 arcminutes
Orientation: North is 0.1° right of vertical
Image Credit: ESO
Release date: November 3, 2003





Wider view:        N0332a
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ABOUT THIS IMAGE:

The center of the nebular complex N44 in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The field size is 8.5 x 8.5 square arcminutes. North is up and East is left.

From Wikipedia:

N44 is an emission nebula with superbubble structure located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way in the constellation Dorado. Originally catalogued in Karl Henize's "Catalogue of H-alpha emission stars and nebulae in the Magellanic Clouds" of 1956, it is approximately 1,000 light-years wide and 160,000-170,000 light-years distant. N44 has a smaller bubble structure inside known as N44F. The superbubble structure of N44 itself is shaped by the radiation pressure of a 40-star group located near its center; the stars are blue-white, very luminous, and incredibly powerful. N44F has been shaped in a similar manner; it has a hot, massive central star with an unusually powerful stellar wind that moves at 7 million kilometers per hour. This is because it loses material at 100 million times the rate of the Sun, or approximately 1,000,000,000,000,000 tons per year. However, varying density in the N44 nebula has caused the formation of several dust pillars that may conceal star formation. This variable density is likely caused by previous supernovae in the vicinity of N44; many of the stars that have shaped it will eventually also end as supernovae. The past effects of supernovae are also confirmed by the fact that N44 emits x-rays.

N44 is classified as an emission nebula because it contains large regions of ionized hydrogen. However, the three strongest emission lines in the nebula are singly ionized oxygen atoms, which emit at an ultraviolet wavelength of 372.7 nm, doubly-ionized oxygen atoms, which emit at a blue-green wavelength of 500.7 nm, and neutral hydrogen atoms, which emit the hydrogen-alpha line at a red wavelength of 656.2 nm.