
April 19, 2013
from
EarthSky Website
Astronomers have used NASA’s
Hubble Space Telescope to
photograph the iconic Horsehead Nebula in a new, infrared light to
mark the 23rd anniversary of the famous observatory’s launch aboard
the space shuttle Discovery on April 24, 1990.
Looking like an apparition rising from whitecaps of interstellar
foam, the iconic
Horsehead Nebula has graced
astronomy books ever since its discovery more than a century ago.
The nebula is a favorite target for
amateur and professional astronomers. It is shadowy in optical
light. It appears transparent and ethereal when seen at infrared
wavelengths.
The rich tapestry of the Horsehead
Nebula pops out against the backdrop of Milky Way stars and distant
galaxies that easily are visible in infrared light.
Hubble has been producing ground-breaking science for two decades.
During that time, it has benefited from a slew of upgrades from
space shuttle missions, including the 2009 addition of a new imaging
workhorse, the high-resolution Wide Field Camera 3 that took the new
portrait of the Horsehead.
The nebula is part of the Orion Molecular Cloud, located about 1,500
light-years away in the constellation Orion.
The cloud also contains other well-known
objects such as,
It is one of the nearest and most easily
photographed regions in which massive stars are being formed.

Hubble Sees a
Horsehead of a Different Color
In the Hubble image, the backlit wisps along the Horsehead’s upper
ridge are being illuminated by
Sigma Orionis, a young five-star
system just out of view.
Along the nebula’s top ridge, two
fledgling stars peek out from their now-exposed nurseries.
Scientists know a harsh ultraviolet glare from one of these bright
stars is slowly evaporating the nebula. Gas clouds surrounding the
Horsehead already have dissipated, but the tip of the jutting pillar
contains a slightly higher density of hydrogen and helium, laced
with dust.
This casts a shadow that protects
material behind it from being stripped away by intense stellar
radiation evaporating the hydrogen cloud, and a pillar structure
forms.
|