about us   subscribe   site map   
 
Goodies
• Slideshows
• Calendars • Space Art • Posters
• Merchandise
• Stickers
• Postcards
• Wallpapers
• Print Layouts
• CD-ROMs & DVDs
• Best of Hubble Images
• Interactive Hubble (Flash 4)
• How Hubble Images Are Made (Flash 4)
• Hubble Image Experience (Flash 4)
• Brochures
• Presentations

Print Layout: N83B - massive infant stars rock their cradle

Click for larger image

Extremely intense radiation from newly born, ultra-bright stars has blown a glowing spherical bubble in the nebula N83B, also known as NGC 1748. A new NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image has helped to decipher the complex interplay of gas and radiation of a star-forming region in a nearby galaxy. The image graphically illustrates just how these massive stars sculpt their environment by generating powerful winds that alter the shape of the parent gaseous nebula. These processes are also seen in our Milky Way in regions like the Orion Nebula.

The Hubble telescope is famous for its contribution to our knowledge about star formation in very distant galaxies. Although most of the stars in the Universe were born several billions of years ago, when the Universe was young, star formation still continues today. This new Hubble image shows a very compact star-forming region in a small part of one of our neighboring galaxies - the Large Magellanic Cloud. This galaxy lies only 165,000 light-years from our Milky Way and can easily be seen with the naked eye from the Southern Hemisphere.

Credit: ESA, NASA & Mohammad Heydari-Malayeri (Observatoire de Paris, France)

 

Info

Read News Release
Id:heic0104a

Downloads

File formats
Fullsize Original
2,602 KB
Large JPEG
617 KB
Screensize JPEG
126 KB