Ancient Mayan culture referred to the Orion Nebula as the cosmic fire of creation.
Contemporary scientists see that enormous cloud of gas and Frauen ohne Unschulddust in space in a somewhat similar way. The vast baby star nursery, south of Orion's belt, is about 1,350 light-years away, making it the closest large star-forming region to Earth. Because of its proximity, it's a prime target for astronomers to study the births of stellar objects.
Within the nebula, aka Messier 42, are protostars (precursors to stars), brown dwarfs (failed stars too small to generate their own nuclear power), and rogue planets (worlds that wander through space unhitched to a host star).
Now with the James Webb Space Telescope, scientists are able to see this important celestial site with unparalleled resolution. The telescope, a partnership of NASA and the Canadian and European space agencies, reveals the cosmos in infrared, a form of light that isn't visible to human eyes. The data, translated into colors people can see, offer a plethora of new insight.
SEE ALSO: Webb finds molecule only made by living things in another worldThis Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Researchers have released new wide-angle views of the Orion Nebula that could enrich our understanding of star evolution. Two images are some of the largest mosaics from Webb so far. The new Webb data have uncovered hundreds of free-floating worlds in the nebula, not orbiting stars, the smallest of which are two times the mass of Saturn, according to ESA.
A European Space Agency tool known as ESA Sky allows users to zoom in and explore the details. Some 2,400 individual images were combined to make the full short-wavelength color composite view, and 712 individual images were combined to obtain the long-wavelength one, according to ESA.
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Light Speed newslettertoday.
At the center of the nebula are four massive stars collectively known as the Trapezium because they are arranged in a trapezoidal shape.
Webb astronomers looking at the Orion Nebula recently detected a curious carbon molecule in a young star system, known as d203-506. Organic chemists say the molecule, methyl cation, assists with the formation of more complex carbon-based molecules, acting like a train station where a molecule can remain for a time before routing to one of many different directions to react with other molecules.
The discovery was published in the journal Naturein June.
Topics NASA
Apple's new iPhone 11 is already delivering memesWe maxed out the new Apple Watch Series 5, and it costs a fortuneTrump capping a pen with his tiny hands gets a huge Photoshop battleApple's new iPhone 11 is already delivering memesStellar pregnancy announcement features a dog wearing glassesWhite House official memo misspells British PM's name three timesAndroid phones already have all the new iPhone 11 featuresLast minute iPhone rumor: No reverse wireless chargingYes, there's going to be a Ferrari Land and it's everything you imaginedCabin's 'moving hotel' bus returns with more spacious sleeping spacePrint IRL Polaroids straight from your phone with this 'tabletop darkroom'Slack releases dark mode for desktop and yes, pleaseBlind man makes selfTrump closed the White House comment line so people are calling his hotelsNow any idiot off the street can answer your dumb Alexa questionsCNBC's Trump tweet alert is a new level of absurdTiny baby hippo takes her first dip in the poolFather teaches his son the ABCs with a little help from trap musicEd Sheeran's tweet about his new GQ cover is classic Ed SheeranEating at Disneyland's newest restaurant costs as much as your rent Amazon's new AR View app lets you virtually demo thousands of products People are getting locked out of their Google Docs, and it's bad This comedy rap has gone so viral pretty much every line is now a meme I'm not ready to let go of the iPhone's home button NYC's plan to finally kill the MetroCard Facebook quarterly earnings were amazing. Zuckerberg isn't cheering 'The Last Jedi' Disney deal is squeezing theaters more than ever Senator reveals an anti Stranger Things 2 review: Binge watching can't disguise how bad this is Nintendo's Reggie Fils Justin Trudeau dressed up for Halloween, and it's a little too self MIT researchers create an AI bot that writes horror stories The fight against alleged secret Facebook eavesdropping New Yorkers attend Halloween Parade after attack in lower Manhattan The new Amazon Oasis is big and waterproof, but it doesn't feel like progress Sean Hannity calls Hillary Clinton "President" on Fox News Nostalgic couple nailed their 'Home Alone' Tyrese Gibson won't return to Fast & Furious if The Rock does These are the Facebook posts Russia promoted during the 2016 election The real reason you want an iPhone X
1.6395s , 10133.1484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Frauen ohne Unschuld】,Co-creation Information Network