News on interstellar matter
- Cygnus-X: the cool swan glowing in flight
- New molecules and star formation in the Milkyway
- The dust in the belt of Orion
- Missing dark matter in interstellar space around the Sun
- New 15meter telescope first ligth
- Tiny particles key to understanding early solar system
- New WISE catalog of entire infrared sky
- The Milkyway is full of bubbles
- Discovery of solid buckyballs in space
- Sources of rare Earth-elements found in space
- Dark clouds in Taurus
- Alien matter in the Solar system
- New mapping show cold gas and strange haze
- The sound of the universe
- Discovery of million degrees hot molecular gasses
- Most detailed infrared image of the Carina nebula
- An interstellar star-nursery
- Infrared image of the famous Helix-nebula
- Widefield infrared view of Milkyway's dust
- The smoky core of the Omega Nebula M17
- Star rebels against its parent cloud
- Observation of a cool gas-cloud being swallowed by black hole
- European astronomers discover cocoons of radiation in nebula
- SOFIA airborne observatory views star forming region W40
- The Cool Clouds of the Carina-nebula
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Psychedelic stellar nursery
Sunday, 08 May 2011 00:34
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| Astronomy - Interstellar matter |
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This psycedelic image of the well-known Lagoon nebula is part of an investigation to explore jets from new-born stars Argentinean astronomers Julia Arias (Universidad de La Serena) and Rodolfo Barbá (Universidad de La Serena and ICATE-CONICET) have used the Gemini South telescope in Chile, to obtain a dramatic new image of the nursery that could be described as psychedelic. Actually, since M8 is located some 5.000 lightyears away, the multi-hued scene is truly a psychedelic "flashback" as its photons had to travel through space for that same number of years before they reached the gigantic Gemini 8m mirror. Astronomers sometimes call the region imaged the “Southern Cliff” because it resembles a sharp drop-off. Beyond the “cliff,” light from a spattering of young background stars in the upper left of the image shines through the cloudscape.
Arias and Barbá obtained the imaging data to explore the evolutionary relationship between the newborn stars and what are known as Herbig-Haro (HH) objects. HH objects form when young stars eject large amounts of fast-moving gas as they grow. This gas plows into the surrounding nebula, producing bright shock fronts that glow as the gas is heated by friction and surrounding gas is excited by the high-energy radiation of nearby hot stars. The researchers found a dozen of these HH objects in the image, spanning sizes that range from a few thousand astronomical units (about a trillion kilometers) to 4.6 light-years, i.e. a little greater than the distance from the Sun to its nearest neighbor Proxima Centauri. The picture – a composite of individual images obtained with two narrow-band optical filters sensitive to hydrogen (red) and ionized sulfur (green) emission, and another that transmits far red light (blue) – reveals in dramatic detail a glorious cloudscape of dust and gas surrounding this nursery of intermediate- and low-mass stars. Most of the newborn stars are imbedded in the tips of thick dusty clouds, which have the appearance of bright-rimmed pillars. The Lagoon nebula is located in the direction of the constellation Sagittarius in the southern Milky Way. Viewed through large amateur telescopes, it appears as a pale ghostly glow with a touch of pink. In this image, the use of selective filters to reveal characteristics of the gas clouds and the assignment of red, green and blue to represent each of three data sets results in myriad and strong color differentiation. Thus, the colors shown are not representative of the light’s actual color. For example, light from the far-red end of the spectrum, beyond what the eye can see, appears blue in this image. The Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) on Gemini South captured the light for the spectacular new image from its perch on Cerro Pachón in the Chilean Andes. Source: Gemini Observatory |




