by Ann » Thu Apr 19, 2018 7:14 pm
bystander wrote: ↑Thu Apr 19, 2018 2:29 pm
Hubble 28th Anniversary Image Captures Roiling Heart of Vast Stellar Nursery
NASA | STScI | HubbleSite | 2018 Apr 19
Lagoon Nebula: Visible Light/Infrared
Credit: NASA, ESA, STScI
Hubble celebrates 28th anniversary in style with stunning view of Lagoon Nebula
For 28 years, NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has been delivering breathtaking views of the universe. Although the telescope has made more than 1.5 million observations of over 40,000 space objects, it is still uncovering stunning celestial gems.
The latest offering is this image of the Lagoon Nebula to celebrate the telescope’s anniversary. Hubble shows this vast stellar nursery in stunning unprecedented detail.
At the center of the photo, a monster young star 200,000 times brighter than our Sun is blasting powerful ultraviolet radiation and hurricane-like stellar winds, carving out a fantasy landscape of ridges, cavities, and mountains of gas and dust. This region epitomizes a typical, raucous stellar nursery full of birth and destruction.
Hubble celebrates 28th anniversary with a trip through the Lagoon Nebula
ESA Hubble Photo Release | 2018 Apr 19
I've always thought that the Hubble closeup of the Hourglass nebula in the middle of the Lagoon looks downright weird, almost unreal. What bothers me is the fact that there is this very massive and very young star in the middle of it. This kind of star should blow a terrific wind and have various outbursts. Therefore, the nebula surrounding it should be chaotic. Well, that is what common sense tells me, and we all know that common sense is the best guide when you want to understand cosmic phenomena - right?
Well, here's what I find hard to understand. Large parts of the nebula do look chaotic. But the dust lanes that form the hourglass shape are insanely "regular"-looking, almost appearing solid.
The weirdest-looking part of this area, if you ask me, is a twisting dust "tube" that looks perfectly undisturbed and calm, like a seal swimming in water. I refer to the dust tube that forms the bottom of the hourglass shape. How can this dust lane be twisting yet not be torn apart, as if it was a solid object? Why is the border between this dust structure and the background so sharp, again making the dust lane look like a physically solid object? Even though it is located so close to the raging power of a very massive and very young star? Is it caused by a combination of a fierce stellar wind twisting it and strong magnetic forces somehow keeping the dust tube together?
Ann
[quote=bystander post_id=281642 time=1524148140 user_id=112005]
[url=http://hubblesite.org/news_release/news/2018-21][size=125][b][i]Hubble 28th Anniversary Image Captures Roiling Heart of Vast Stellar Nursery[/i][/b][/size][/url]
NASA | STScI | HubbleSite | 2018 Apr 19
[quote]
[float=left][c][imghover=https://cdn.spacetelescope.org/archives/images/screen/heic1808a.jpg]https://cdn.spacetelescope.org/archives/images/screen/heic1808b.jpg[/imghover][size=85][i]Lagoon Nebula: Visible Light/Infrared[/i]
[b][i]Credit: NASA, ESA, STScI[/i][/b][/size][hr][/hr][/c][/float]
[b]Hubble celebrates 28th anniversary in style with stunning view of Lagoon Nebula[/b]
For 28 years, NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has been delivering breathtaking views of the universe. Although the telescope has made more than 1.5 million observations of over 40,000 space objects, it is still uncovering stunning celestial gems.
The latest offering is this image of the Lagoon Nebula to celebrate the telescope’s anniversary. Hubble shows this vast stellar nursery in stunning unprecedented detail.
At the center of the photo, a monster young star 200,000 times brighter than our Sun is blasting powerful ultraviolet radiation and hurricane-like stellar winds, carving out a fantasy landscape of ridges, cavities, and mountains of gas and dust. This region epitomizes a typical, raucous stellar nursery full of birth and destruction. [/quote]
[url=https://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1808/][size=125][b][i]Hubble celebrates 28th anniversary with a trip through the Lagoon Nebula[/i][/b][/size][/url]
ESA Hubble Photo Release | 2018 Apr 19
[/quote]
I've always thought that the Hubble closeup of the Hourglass nebula in the middle of the Lagoon looks downright weird, almost unreal. What bothers me is the fact that there is this very massive and very young star in the middle of it. This kind of star should blow a terrific wind and have various outbursts. Therefore, the nebula surrounding it should be chaotic. Well, that is what common sense tells me, and we all know that common sense is the best guide when you want to understand cosmic phenomena - right?
Well, here's what I find hard to understand. Large parts of the nebula do look chaotic. But the dust lanes that form the hourglass shape are insanely "regular"-looking, almost appearing solid.
The weirdest-looking part of this area, if you ask me, is a twisting dust "tube" that looks perfectly undisturbed and calm, like a seal swimming in water. I refer to the dust tube that forms the bottom of the hourglass shape. How can this dust lane be twisting yet not be torn apart, as if it was a solid object? Why is the border between this dust structure and the background so sharp, again making the dust lane look like a physically solid object? Even though it is located so close to the raging power of a very massive and very young star? Is it caused by a combination of a fierce stellar wind twisting it and strong magnetic forces somehow keeping the dust tube together?
Ann