NASA has just released breathtaking pictures of what it calls the “pillars of creativity” where new worlds are being born – literally.
The photos were taken by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, in addition to the support of ESA and CSA (the space agency of America and Canada).
In the picture, a giant, ghostly figure emerges as a giant hand reaching up to the sky, big and strong fingers like pillars. That’s Da Bang Van Da Bang, a great stellar region located in the constellation Cu Sera.
Latest photo from James Webb – Photo: NASA/ ESA/ CSA/ STScI
The massive structure – up to 4 light years tall – is called the Pillars of Creation because the hydrogen signature and the dense dust inside are fueling the new stellar process. As part of the Eagle name in the constellation Giant Snake, the Earths are about 7,000 years old, the three cloud columns of this statue once surprised the authors with the beauty of the first time their names were photographed. sealed the bble space telescope on April 1, 1995.
“I’ve been studying the Eagles since the mid-1990s, trying to look ‘inside’ those years-long light pillars that tall Bubbles, looking for the young stars inside them. I know that when James Webb takes a picture of it, it’s going to be amazing” – BBC quoted Professor Mark McCagrarean, senior adviser on the ESA’s reading program.
According to NASA, the four most prominent stars in the image from James Webb’s Near Infrared Camera (NARCam) are the dead new stars, still in the middle of the “protostar”, whose “radiant red” is located. outside one of the pillars – which is made of sign and belly.
Even though these bright red balls are massive enough inside the star and dust columns, they begin to collapse under the gravity of the stars, slowly heating up and killing the protostars. When these new nations grow up, they will gradually decimate the women who turn to it, where it is very likely that foreigners will be born and reign for another billion billion years.
These columns of dust and gas are located about 6,500 light-years away, in the Milky Way galaxy itself – containing the Earth. Specifically, they are found in the Eagle Nebula, first detected in 1995 by the Hubble telescope.
The shallow water ripples of some of the main pillars are powerful energy and matter ejections from the young stars, which are shooting out massive jet streams, and clouds. Clouds of material materialize and create amazing objects. These young stars are about a hundred thousand years old.
The new data will help scientists read all the way up to the stellar model, with precise determinations of the number of young stars, as well as the size and number of stars in the region. At the end of the day, you can be very specific about the stars that fall and pop out of these dust clouds over the course of the year.
The James Webb Space Telescope is the current tool for observing the universe. With a sensitivity 100 times that of a bble, it could have originated in the very earliest part of the universe, right after the Bang Bang explosion 13.8 billion years ago. The farther away objects are from their light, the more it takes them to reach Earth. Therefore, observing the deep universe is strange from afar. That’s why NASA’s secretive telescope is dubbed “a tool of the past.”
Although Webb’s near-field observations are very close to the bottom, no names are found behind the cloud columns in this image. NASA says that the dusty mixture and translucent signatures in the densest part of the disk called the Milky Way’s Milky Way are sifting through our vision of the deep universe.