Hubble may have kept its most beautiful photo from last year: BGR

  • NASA’s powerful Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer Space Telescope have been combined to create stunning images of the Orion Nebula.
  • The nebula, which is a huge mixture of different gases and heated matter that surrounds young stars, was shot at different wavelengths.
  • The picture looks like a painting, but it is actually something that exists and reminds us how beautiful the space can be.

Well, the New Year is official here, and while many places that traditionally celebrate the birth of a new 365-day streak have had to cancel their annual fireworks displays, you can always count on NASA to find some fireworks somewhere in the cosmos. In a new blog post, NASA chose to highlight an astonishing image that is actually the combination of observations by both the Hubble Space Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope.

The image is of the Orion Nebula, a huge collection of swirling gases that surround some very young but very large stars. The two telescopes captured the same image in different wavelengths of light, allowing us to glimpse this region of space as we have never seen it before.

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Nebulae are incredibly interesting features of the cosmos because they are essentially the ingredients of galaxies and galaxies, but not yet fully merge into objects such as planets and stars. In this case, the Orion Nebula has already given birth to a small number of stars, but they are very young.

NASA explains:

Gaseous eddies of hydrogen, sulfur and hydrocarbons rock a collection of young stars in this composite image of the Orion Nebula, as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope. Together, the two telescopes will reveal carbon-rich molecules in the cosmic cloud of this star-forming factory 1,500 light-years away.

Hubble’s ultraviolet and visible light recording reveals hydrogen and sulfur gas heated and ionized by intense ultraviolet radiation from the massive stars, collectively known as the “trapezium.” Meanwhile, Spitzer’s infrared image exposes carbon-rich molecules in the cloud. Together, the telescopes expose the stars in Orion as a rainbow of dots scattered throughout the image.

It’s impossible to say what the next few billion years will bring, but if the nebula is left undisturbed by outside forces, it will likely continue to form stars and possibly planets, moons and asteroids that will orbit around it. We can’t know how much material is actually here, or what kind of planets and stars it could produce in the future, but for now it remains a very interesting area of ​​the sky.

Cloudy Orion Nebula

Studying areas like these, and the Orion Nebula in particular, has given scientists some powerful insights into the forces that build the objects we see in the cosmos. It will be observed for many years, decades, and maybe even centuries to come, and there is probably much more that it will eventually teach us.

Mike Wehner has spent the last decade reporting on technology and video games, covering the latest news and trends in VR, wearables, smartphones and future technology. Most recently, Mike worked as a Tech Editor at The Daily Dot and has appeared on USA Today, Time.com, and numerous other web and print stores. His love of reporting comes second to his gaming addiction.

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