This infrared image of the Orion Nebula features plenty of dust but no stars. In these infrared wavelengths, it’s possible to see hot spots where new stars are forming, while unseen bright, massive stars have carved out caverns of empty space. Credits: ESA/NASA/JPL-Caltech
In a tale of cosmic proportions, the region is being transformed by the
massive stars that live and die within it.
A new image combining previously released data from three telescopes shows
a region that includes the Orion Nebula, named after the mighty hunter from Greek mythology who was felled by a
scorpion’s sting. But the story of how this dusty region came to be is just as
dramatic.
The Orion Nebula is located in the constellation Orion, which takes the appearance of a hunter raising a club and shield at an unseen target. Three stars in a line are together known as Orion’s belt; the region shown in the image aligns with another series of stars perpendicular to the belt, known as Orion’s sword. If you could see it in the sky, the region would appear about the size of the full moon.
There’s a lot to see in this fly-through of a new infrared image of the
Orion Nebula, like cavities carved out by unseen massive stars and bright spots
where new stars are forming. The colors represent infrared wavelengths not
visible to the human eye, captured by three infrared space telescopes. Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Two enormous caverns that dominate the cloud were carved out by giant stars
(unseen in this image) that can release up to a million times more light than
our Sun. All that radiation breaks apart dust grains there, helping to create
the pair of cavities. Much of the remaining dust is swept away by winds from
stars or when the stars die explosive deaths as supernovae.
NASA Telescope Takes 12-Year Time-Lapse
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The blue light in
these areas indicates warm dust. Observed in infrared light – a range of wavelengths outside
what human eyes can detect – the views were provided by NASA’s retired Spitzer Space Telescope and the Wide-Field Infrared Survey
Explorer (WISE), which now operates under the moniker NEOWISE.
Spitzer and WISE were both managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Southern California.
Around the edge of the two cavernous
regions, the dust that appears green is slightly cooler. Red indicates cold
dust that reaches temperatures of about minus 440 Fahrenheit (minus 260
Celsius). The red and green light shows data from the now-retired Herschel
Space Telescope, an ESA (European Space Agency) observatory that captured
wavelengths of light in the far-infrared and microwave ranges, where cold dust
radiates. Herschel’s large mirror provided high-resolution views of these
clouds, which are full of contours, nooks, and crannies. The cold dust appears
mostly on the outskirts of the dust cloud, away from the regions where stars
form.
In between the two hollow regions are
orange filaments where dust condenses and forms new stars. Over time, these
filaments may produce new giant stars that will once again reshape the region.
More
About the Missions
JPL, a division of Caltech in Pasadena,
managed Spitzer mission operations for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in
Washington until the spacecraft was retired in 2020. Science operations were
conducted at the Spitzer Science Center at IPAC at Caltech. Spacecraft
operations were based at Lockheed Martin Space in Littleton, Colorado. The
Spitzer data archive is housed at the Infrared Science Archive at IPAC at
Caltech.
For more information about NASA’s Spitzer
mission, go to: https://www.ipac.caltech.edu/project/spitzer
Launched in 2009, the WISE spacecraft was
placed into hibernation in 2011 after completing its primary mission. In
September 2013, NASA reactivated the spacecraft with the primary goal of
scanning for near-Earth objects, or NEOs, and the mission and spacecraft were
renamed NEOWISE. The mission was selected competitively under NASA’s Explorers
Program managed by the agency’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland. NEOWISE is a project of JPL and the University of Arizona and is
supported by NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office.
For more information about WISE, go to: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/WISE/main/index.html
NASA’s Herschel Project Office was based at JPL. The NASA Herschel Science Center was based at IPAC.
Calla Cofield
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Source: NASA, ESA Reveal Tale of Death, Dust in Orion Constellation | NASA
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