DIFFUSE MATTER IN SPACE
387
Returning to the question whether the usual assumption of perfect
transparency of space (apart from specially obscured regions) is justified,
we must answer that we think it is; the only serious risk in this conclusion
is that it neglects the possibility of absorption by meteor dust.
Dark Nebulae and Diffuse Nebulae.
263. We now consider diffuse nebulae such as the Orion Nebula which
show bright line emission spectra, and dark nebulae which appear as
obscuring patches in the sky hiding the light of the stars behind. Whilst
it may not always be possible to discriminate correctly between an
obscuring patch and an actual lacuna in the distribution of the stars,
there are many cases where the existence of dark nebulosity is undoubted.
Dark and diffuse nebulae are closely connected and grade into one another
insensibly; sometimes a diffuse nebula is continued as an obscuring patch;
sometimes part of a dark nebula is faintly luminous where the proximity
of bright stars gives the necessary stimulation.
It is now generally agreed that the luminosity of a diffuse nebula is
stimulated by the radiation of the stars contained in it; it is often described
as a fluorescence. The dependence of the nebular light on the'stellar radia
tion is well shown by Hubble’s Variable Nebula, where the stimulating
star is a variable and accordingly the nebula itself is variable. The idea is
that the atoms in the nebula are excited by absorbing the radiation coming
from the stimulating star or stars, and emit their characteristic bright line
spectrum as they relapse.
Consider for example the lines of the Balmer series ( H a , H etc.)
which appear in the diffuse nebulae. The wave-length of the radiation
required to raise the normal hydrogen atom to the required state is
1025-5 A for H a ranging up to 911-5 A for the highest members of the
series. As this is far in the ultra-violet the hot stars will be much more rich
in the required radiation than cool stars. Accordingly luminous nebulae
showing the hydrogen lines are generally found surrounding groups of
B type stars. The dark nebulae may be considered to be precisely similar
intrinsically, but lacking stars hot enough to stimulate them. It may be
remarked, however, that it is possible for opacity to be stimulated by
radiation—the radiation, for example, liberating more free electrons and
thus providing absorbing mechanism. I do not suppose that the opacity
of ordinary dark nebulae is a stimulated opacity; but an examination of
the photographs of Hubble’s Variable Nebula strongly suggests that the
dark patches of obscuration which appear and disappear in certain regions
of it are governed by a varying stimulus from the associated star.
Since the state of the nebula is far removed from thermodynamic
equilibrium, the emission is not generally in the same wave-lengths as