SPACE
SCIENTISTS SPOT A ‘DARK NEBULA’ BEING TORN APART BY INFANT STARS
WORDS BRANDON SPECKTOR
Circinus West is a vast star-forming region 2,500 light years from Earth
© CTIO/NOIRLab/DOE/NSF/AURA
A battle is raging between darkness and light in the constellation Circinus, and a new image from the National Science Foundation’s Dark Energy Camera captures a key turning point in the cosmic campaign. Known as the Circinus West molecular cloud, the ominous black structure at the centre of the image is a vast conglomeration of star-forming gas. Objects like these are known as ‘dark nebulae’ because they’re so dense with gas and dust that light cannot penetrate them. The dark cloud shown here stretches an estimated 180 light years across.