Once I knew what to look for, I could fleetingly see the entire horse with its various protrusions as a subtle darkness against the brighter Milky Way. Both have long bands of interstellar dust along their equators that appear dark against the bright, starry backdrop. If we could see the Milky Way galaxy edge-on from afar, it would look similar to NGC 891 in Andromeda. Try for the dark rump and hind leg first then work from there to fill in the rest of the horse. in late June. Allow your eyes time to fully dark adapt beforehand. The figure is large but faint, about 10° long by 7° wide, and stands due south and highest in the sky around 12:30 a.m. and southern Canada, but considerably higher up from the southern states and points south. It’s only a couple fists high for those of us living in the northern U.S. While the dark horse shows up well in time-exposure photos, you’ll need dark, rural skies to view it with the naked eye. The nebula is highest in the sky around 12:30 a.m.
You’ll need dark skies and averted vision to spot the Dark Horse. The Pipe is further subdivided into B59, B72, B77 and B78, from a survey of dark nebulae by early 20th century American astronomer E.E. The largest part of the horse, the hind leg, is nicknamed the Pipe Nebula and lies 600-700 light years away. While it’s fun to see the horse as a single figure, astronomers catalog the various body parts as individual dark nebulae with separate numbers and even names. Saturn sits astride the horse’s back or eastern side. There are more obvious parts of the Rift to the naked eye but few conjure up as striking an image as the Dark Horse, located about one outstretched fist to the left of the Scorpius’ brightest star, Antares. The much smaller Snake Nebula (shaped like the letter “S”) is visible at top center. The left end of the Pipe forms the long back leg and rump of the Dark Horse. We can’t see them yet because of obscuring dust.
Dense cores of dust within the Pipe Nebula are collapsing to form new stars. Within the curdles of dark nebulae, astronomers use dust-penetrating infrared and radio telescopes to watch new stars in the process of incubation. Gravity has been at work on the dust since the earliest days, compressing the denser clumps into new stars and star clusters. Tiny dust particles spewed by older, evolved stars and exploding supernovas have been settling in the plane of the galaxy since its birth 13.2 billion years ago. While the dust is sparse, it adds up over the light years to form a thick, dark band silhouetted against the more distant stars. Can you find the firefly that flashed during the exposure? Credit: Bob King Several bright Milky Way star clouds are also visible including the Small Sagittarius Star Cloud (left) and the Large Sagittarius Star Cloud below and left of Saturn. To its right you can see the prancing pony standing on its tail with legs sticking out to the right. Saturn dominates the scene at left center in this photo taken on June 20. If you could suck it all up with a monster vacuum cleaner and expose the billions of stars otherwise hidden, the Milky Way would cast obvious shadows - even suburban skywatchers would routinely see it. While appearing to be little more than empty, starless space, in reality the Rift consists of enormous clouds of cosmic dust and gas in the plane of the galaxy called dark nebulae that blot out the light of more distant stars. Saturn and the Dark Horse are seen at lower right. The Great Rift appears to unzip the summer Milky Way right down the middle. The Dark Horse is part of the Great Rift, a dark gap that splits the band of the Milky Way in half, starting at the Northern Cross and extending all the way down to the “Teapot” of Sagittarius in the south. I didn’t notice it with the naked eye, but as soon as the time exposure ended and I looked at the camera’s back display, there it was - Saturn riding barebacked on the Galactic Dark Horse! The horse, more of a prancing pony, is a collection of dark nebulae in the southern sky beautifully placed for viewing on late June evenings. The photo, taken on June 20, 2017, has been turned 90° to the right, so the horse stands upright. The head is to the right with a wisp of a tail to the left. The bright dot is Saturn and it shines on the back of the Galactic Dark Horse, a collection of dark nebulae in the constellation Ophiuchus that resembles a prancing horse.