• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

JWST To Reveal Secrets Of Star Birth With Gorgeous New Orion Nebula Image

September 13, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

Most of the objects the JWST has studied are so faint they can’t be seen with binoculars, let alone the naked eye. The Orion Nebula, sometimes known as the Great Nebula or M42, is different. It’s the closest star-forming region to Earth and looks like a fuzzy star in Orion’s sword in the constellation. Even a modest amateur telescope reveals the nebula’s shape and some of the newborn stars, so imagine what the most powerful space telescope ever launched can see. Well, now you don’t have to because the images have arrived.

Until quite recently, astronomically speaking, the Orion Nebula was a cloud of gas containing thousands of times the mass of the Sun. Back then we could only have really seen it because it blocked out any stars behind. Then the gas started condensing into new stars, some of them very large. Although the stars have yet to reach their peak brightness they are already throwing out enough light to illuminate much of the remaining gas. It is thought the Sun and Earth formed in a nebula much like this one 4.5 billion years ago.

Advertisement

The nebula is around 24 light-years across and 1,344 light-years away, but the JWST can image it with a resolution of about 5 light hours, or about the distance from the Sun to Neptune. That allows us to see detail in protoplanetary disks around some of the 700 or so stars that have begun to shine within the nebula. 

Huge green, purple and blue swirls of gas dotted with star lights and the charcteristic JWST 6-pointed start that is actually a reflection from its huge mirror

The northern region of the M42 (Orion Nebula) in maximum detail. Some of the team working on this observation claim to see a frog in there. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, PDRs4All ERS Team; image processing Salomé Fuenmayor

“These new observations allow us to better understand how massive stars transform the gas and dust cloud in which they are born,” said Professor Els Peeters of the University of Western Ontario in a statement. 

“Massive young stars emit large quantities of ultraviolet radiation directly into the native cloud that still surrounds them, and this changes the physical shape of the cloud as well as its chemical makeup. How precisely this works, and how it affects further star and planet formation is not yet well known.”

The blue swirls of gas and dust that stars form in in the Orion Nebula with box outs detailing what the image shows ie a white light isa young star, some of the swirly lines are filaments

Three stars in the nebula and some of the gas filaments seen in even greater detail in breakout boxes. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, PDRs4All ERS Team; image processing Salomé Fuenmayor

“We clearly see several dense filaments. These filamentary structures may promote a new generation of stars in the deeper regions of the cloud of dust and gas,” Dr Olivier Berné of the Institut D’Astrophysique Spatiale added.

“Inside its cocoon, young stars with a disk of dust and gas in which planets form are observed in the nebula. Small cavities dug by new stars being blown by the intense radiation and stellar winds of newborn stars are also clearly visible.”

The Spitzer space telescope operated at wavelengths similar, but with rather lower resolution

The Spitzer space telescope operated at wavelengths similar, but with rather lower resolution. Image Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, PDRs4All ERS Team; image processing Olivier Berné/ NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Megeath (University of Toledo, Ohio)

The JWST’s images are always more spectacular than those taken by Hubble simply because the new telescope has a much larger primary mirror to collect more light. However, the difference is particularly marked here, because Hubble’s view, like that of most Earthly telescopes, is shrouded by dust that largely blocks out visible light. Infrared light, which JWST sees, is much less affected by dust – the infrared capacity was chosen in part for its ability to see into regions like this one.

Comparison between how the two space telescopes see the same inner area of the nebula, showing off the JWST’s greater power to peer through dust. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, PDRs4All ERS Team; image processing Olivier Berné.

Comparison between how the two space telescopes see the same inner area of the nebula, showing off the JWST’s greater power to peer through dust. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, PDRs4All ERS Team; image processing Olivier Berné

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. World’s top three Christian leaders in climate appeal ahead of U.N. summit
  2. Exclusive: Investors call for governments to toughen climate accounting – letter
  3. Oracle uses AI to automate parts of digital marketing
  4. Shipwrecks of World War I are a seabed museum in Turkey

Source Link: JWST To Reveal Secrets Of Star Birth With Gorgeous New Orion Nebula Image

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Plastic Chemicals May Delay The Internal Body Clock By 17 Minutes, According To Study
  • Widespread Availability Of RSV Vaccine Linked To Fall In Baby Hospitalizations
  • How Often Should You Wash Your Bedding?
  • What’s The Youngest Language In The World?
  • Look Alert: The Most Active Volcano In the Pacific Northwest Is Probably About To Blow, Maybe
  • Should We Be Using Microwaves?
  • What Is The Largest Deer On Earth?
  • World’s First CRISPR-Edited Spider Produces Glowing Red Silk From Its Spinneret
  • First Ever Image Of “Free Floating” Atoms, The Nocebo Effect Beats The Placebo Effect When It Comes To Pain, And Much More This Week
  • 165-Million-Year-Old Fossil Is New Species Of Ancient Parasite. Did It Come From A Dinosaur’s Butt?
  • It’s True: Time Really Does Move Slower When You’re Exercising
  • Salmon Make Some Of The Most Epic Migrations In Nature. Why Do They Bother?
  • The Catholic Apostolic Church In Albury Has Been Sealed “Until The Second Coming”
  • The Voynich Manuscript Appears To Follow Zipf’s Law. Could It Be A Real Language?
  • When Will All Life On Earth Die Out? Here’s What The Data Says
  • One Of The World’s Rarest And Most Endangered Mammals Is *Checks Notes* A Unicorn
  • Neanderthals Used World’s Oldest Wooden Spears To Hunt Horses 200,000 Years Ago
  • Striking Results Show Neanderthal Crafters Were Sharper Than We Thought
  • Pioneering Research Reveals How Darkness And Light Made The Parthenon Appear Divine
  • Peculiar Material Revealed To Have Hidden Quantum State That Can’t Be Flipped In A Mirror
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version