This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features
the nearest star-forming region to Earth, the Orion Nebula (Messier 42, M42),
located some 1,500 light-years away.
ESA/Hubble, NASA, and T. Megeath
This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image
peers into the dusty recesses of the nearest massive star-forming region to
Earth, the Orion Nebula (Messier 42, M42). Just 1,500 light-years away, the Orion Nebula is visible to the
unaided eye below the three stars that form the ‘belt’ in the constellation
Orion. The nebula is home to hundreds of newborn stars including the subject of
this image: the protostars HOPS 150 and HOPS 153.
These protostars get their names from
the Herschel Orion Protostar Survey, conducted with ESA’s Herschel Space Observatory. The object visible in the upper-right corner of this image is HOPS
150: it’s a binary star system where two young protostars orbit each other.
Each star has a small, dusty disk of material surrounding it. These stars
gather material from their respective dust disks, growing in the process. The
dark line that cuts across the bright glow of these protostars is a cloud of
gas and dust falling in on the pair of protostars. It is over 2,000 times wider
than the distance between Earth and the Sun. Based on the amount of infrared
light HOPS 150 is emitting, as compared to other wavelengths it emits, the
protostars are mid-way down the path to becoming mature stars.
Extending across the left side of the
image is a narrow, colorful outflow called a jet. This jet comes from the
nearby protostar HOPS 153, which is out of the frame. HOPS 153 is significantly
younger than its neighbor. That stellar object is still deeply embedded in its
birth nebula and enshrouded by a cloud of cold, dense gas. While Hubble cannot
penetrate this gas to see the protostar, the jet HOPS 153 emitted is brightly
and clearly visible as it plows into the surrounding gas and dust of the Orion
Nebula.
The transition from tightly swaddled protostar to fully fledged star will dramatically affect HOPS 153’s surroundings. As gas falls onto the protostar, its jets spew material and energy into interstellar space, carving out bubbles and heating the gas. By stirring up and warming nearby gas, HOPS 153 may regulate the formation of new stars in its neighborhood and even slow its own growth.
Source: Hubble Captures Young Stars Changing Their Environments - NASA Science
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