commonly referred to as the
Pillars of Creation A few of the brightest H II regions are visible to the
naked eye. However, none seem to have been noticed before the advent of the
telescope in the early 17th century. Even
Galileo did not notice the
Orion Nebula when he first observed the
star cluster within it (previously cataloged as a single star, θ Orionis, by
Johann Bayer). The French observer
Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc is credited with the discovery of the Orion Nebula in 1610. Since that early observation large numbers of H II regions have been discovered in the Milky Way and other galaxies. In early days astronomers distinguished between "diffuse
nebulae" (now known to be H II regions), which retained their fuzzy appearance under magnification through a large telescope, and nebulae that could be resolved into stars, now known to be galaxies external to our own. Confirmation of Herschel's hypothesis of star formation had to wait another hundred years, when
William Huggins together with his wife
Mary Huggins turned his
spectroscope on various nebulae. Some, such as the
Andromeda Nebula, had spectra quite similar to those of
stars, but turned out to be galaxies consisting of hundreds of millions of individual stars. Others looked very different. Rather than a strong continuum with
absorption lines superimposed, the Orion Nebula and other similar objects showed only a small number of
emission lines. In
planetary nebulae, the brightest of these spectral lines was at a
wavelength of 500.7
nanometres, which did not correspond with a line of any known
chemical element. At first it was hypothesized that the line might be due to an unknown element, which was named
nebulium—a similar idea had led to the discovery of
helium through analysis of the
Sun's spectrum in 1868. However, while helium was isolated on earth soon after its discovery in the spectrum of the sun, nebulium was not. In the early 20th century,
Henry Norris Russell proposed that rather than being a new element, the line at 500.7 nm was due to a familiar element in unfamiliar conditions. Interstellar matter, considered dense in an astronomical context, is at high vacuum by laboratory standards. Physicists showed in the 1920s that in gas at extremely low
density,
electrons can populate excited
metastable energy levels in
atoms and
ions, which at higher densities are rapidly de-excited by collisions. Electron transitions from these levels in
doubly ionized oxygen give rise to the 500.7 nm line. These
spectral lines, which can only be seen in very low density gases, are called
forbidden lines. Spectroscopic observations thus showed that planetary nebulae consisted largely of extremely
rarefied ionised oxygen gas (OIII). During the 20th century, observations showed that H II regions often contained
hot, bright stars. These stars are many times more massive than the Sun, and are the shortest-lived stars, with total lifetimes of only a few million years (compared to stars like the Sun, which live for several billion years). Therefore, it was surmised that H II regions must be regions in which new stars were forming. Over a period of several million years, a cluster of stars will form in an H II region, before
radiation pressure from the hot young stars causes the nebula to disperse. == Origin and lifetime ==