Hubble
Finds Young Stars in Cosmic Dance
This composite image, made with two cameras aboard NASA's Hubble
Space Telescope, shows a pair of 12 light-year-long jets of gas
blasted into space from a young system of three stars. The jet is
seen in visible light, and its dusty disk and stars are seen in
infrared light. These stars are located near a huge torus, or donut,
of gas and dust from which they formed. This torus is tilted edge-on
and can be seen as a dark bar near the bottom of the picture.
Apparently, a gravitational brawl among the stars occurred a few
thousand years ago and kicked out one member (on the left edge of
the bright blob above the disk). As a result, the two other stars
were joined together as a tight binary pair and flew off in the
opposite direction, and appear as a red blob below the disk.
The huge jet comes from one of the stars in this tight binary pair.
The star spews out streams of gas in opposite directions, like water
from a garden hose. It is not a smooth flow, but rather happens
episodically, creating lumps of gas that fly across space at over
one million miles per hour. These gaseous cannonballs catch up with
and "rear-end" slower moving blobs, creating a pattern that resembles
a string of Christmas lights embedded in the jet.
The visible-light image was taken with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary
Camera 2 in Nov. 1998 and the infrared image by Hubble's Near Infrared
Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer in Mar. 1998. The disk and
associated stars are embedded in a large dark cloud and are only
visible at infrared wavelengths.
Credit: NASA and B. Reipurth
(CASA, Univ. of Colorado)
The research team consists of Bo Reipurth, Ka Chun Yu and John Bally
from the University of Colorado; Steve Heathcote from Cerro Tololo
Inter-American Observatory, and Luis Felipe Rodriguez from the
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM).
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