Hovering like a shadow against the brilliant, star-studded backdrop of the Milky Way, the cosmic bat spreads its dark wings across the constellation Ophiuchus. Cataloged as LDN 43 (Lynds' Dark Nebula 43), this striking silhouette is not an empty void, but a dense, opaque cloud of interstellar dust positioned roughly 1,400 light-years from Earth. By blocking the light of the stars behind it, the cold cosmic dust creates a dramatic, skeletal contrast. Far from being a quiet graveyard, the heart of this dark nebula is an active stellar nursery. Young, newly forming stars—still cocooned in their natal envelopes of gas and dust—locally illuminate their surroundings, while the faint, surrounding reflection nebula (LBN 7) reveals the delicate, intricate structures of this magnificent star-forming region.
Here is an APOD-style description of the image:
LDN 43: The Cosmic Bat Nebula
Hovering like a shadow against the brilliant, star-studded backdrop of the Milky Way, the cosmic bat spreads its dark wings across the constellation Ophiuchus. Cataloged as LDN 43 (Lynds' Dark Nebula 43), this striking silhouette is not an empty void, but a dense, opaque cloud of interstellar dust positioned roughly 1,400 light-years from Earth. By blocking the light of the stars behind it, the cold cosmic dust creates a dramatic, skeletal contrast. Far from being a quiet graveyard, the heart of this dark nebula is an active stellar nursery. Young, newly forming stars—still cocooned in their natal envelopes of gas and dust—locally illuminate their surroundings, while the faint, surrounding reflection nebula (LBN 7) reveals the delicate, intricate structures of this magnificent star-forming region.