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Edge-On Protoplanetary Disc in the Orion Nebula

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Resembling an interstellar Frisbee, this is a disk of dust seen edge-on around a newborn star in the Orion nebula, located 1, 500 light-years away. Because the disk is edge-on, the star is largely hidden inside, in this striking Hubble Space Telescope picture. The disk may be an embryonic planetary system in the making. Our solar system probably formed out of just such a disk 4.5 billion years ago. At 17 times the diameter of our own solar system, this disk is the largest of several recently discovered in the Orion nebula.

The left image is a three-color composite, taken in blue, green, and red emission lines from glowing gas in the nebula.

Credit: Mark McCaughrean (Max-Planck-Institute for Astronomy), C. Robert O'Dell (Rice University), and NASA/ESA

 

Info

Long Caption
Press Release
Id:opo9545i
Object:M 42, Orion Proplyd, NGC 1976, Messier 42
Type:Star, Miscellaneous
Instru-ment:WFPC2
Width:161
Height:161

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