![]() Alpha Circini (of Circinus) lies at lower left, while the stars of northern Musca fall below Crux. Crux and southern Centaurus fall within a brilliant, and the most southern, portion of the Milky Way. The picture features the famed "Coalsack," a large complex of dark interstellar molecule-rich dust clouds (in which stars are forming that lies below Mimosa. Just below center is a large reddish cloud of interstellar hydrogen called Ced 122 that is illuminated by nearby and embedded stars. The compact open cluster Kappa Crucis (the "Jewel Box") looks like a star down and to the left of Mimosa. A fainter cluster, NGC 5299, is about a quarter of the way between Alpha and Beta Cen. The deep red star just to the left of center is V 766 Cen, a luminous supergiant (possible hypergiant) whose light is heavily absorbed and reddened by interstellar dust. |
To see a labelled image, push the star:
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See the connection to Epsilon Cen. |
See the view from Crux through Carina to Vela. |