Why are nebulae colorful?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Elements emit specific wavelengths
Temperature creates colors — Wrong. Temperature matters, but colors mainly come from specific atoms or ions emitting characteristic wavelengths—hydrogen often appears red, oxygen green-blue, and sulfur is commonly shown red or orange in false-color images.
Elements emit specific wavelengths ✓ — Correct! Nebulae glow through emission—nearby stars' UV radiation excites gas atoms, which emit specific wavelengths. Hydrogen (red, 656nm H-alpha), oxygen (green/blue, OIII), sulfur (red, SII), nitrogen, helium contribute. Photos often use false color to highlight elements. Eyes see nebulae as gray/faint—too dim for color vision. Long-exposure telescopes capture vivid colors!
Distance affects light perception — Wrong. Distance doesn't create colors (except extreme redshift). Nebula colors come from different elements emitting characteristic wavelengths when excited.
More Astronomy & Space questions
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