In this website’s second look at the Rotten Fish dark nebula, I wanted to bring home the concenpts involved in star nucleation. In case you were wondering, the answer is yes, star formation can happen in clouds not emitting Halpha light, even though we can certainly assiciate Haspha with star cluster / stellar nurseries. The answer lies in the mechanism of pressure buildup at points allowing diatomic molecular hydrogen and dust to nucleate a star. In both cases, dust provides the necessary cold temperature in addition to critical point temperature suppression. However, in the case of a dark cloud, the pressures required to nucleation is based on cloud turbulence alone, while stellar nursery clouds are aided in pressure build-up by stellar winds. It seems from images, that star formation in clouds is much more sporadic, while star clusters are more likely to be formed in stellar nurseries shining in Halpha light.
The Whirlpool Galaxy (M51) – In for Questioning

The M51 Galaxy or “The Whirlpool Galaxy” definitely strikes an awsome pose, with its two apparent “centres”, and multiple star fuzzies emanating from its extremes. I decided to get all Sherlock Holmesy on it in my desire to figure out what was going on. Yes it is two glalaxies interacting, but what is the nature of this interaction. What happened to its bottom arm? – it looks like it was bitten off. The upper arm looks more intact, but also exhibiting Halpha starburst too. Is the bottom of the galaxy connected to the top with stars circling the left hand side? Can infrared light help us? Can it potentially reveal something? I recommend reading more to find out.