More than Dust in the Wind

More than Dust in the Wind

There is no deny that the dark nebula, LDN 534, makes an interesting target for astrophotography. It has all the earmarks of sky clouds being transformed by the wind. In fact it is likely a section of molecular cloud ripped out of the spiral arms, and being eroded by the winds of ISM. Unlike star fields that appear like foggy light that gets more disperse as concentration drops, the eroded molecular cloud seems to be much more wispy and reluctant to yield its integrity. Undoubtedly the hydrogen molecules do yield to the wind, disassociating to become atoms while the dust gets dispersed. We are lucky in this one, as a few stars make some nice blue reflections. In other cases, the eroded molecular cloud forms very coincidental shapes – included some naturally streamlined ones.