Ghostly
Reflections in the Pleiades
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has caught the eerie,
wispy tendrils of a dark interstellar cloud being destroyed by the
passage of one of the brightest stars in the Pleiades star cluster.
Like a flashlight beam shining off the wall of a cave, the star
is reflecting light off the surface of pitch black clouds of cold
gas laced with dust. These are called reflection nebulae.
The famous cluster is easily visible in the evening
sky during the winter months as a small grouping of bright blue
stars, named after the "Seven Sisters" of Greek mythology. Resembling
a small dipper, this star cluster lies in the constellation Taurus
at a distance of about 380 light-years from Earth. The unaided eye
can discern about half a dozen bright stars in the cluster, but
a small telescope will reveal that the Pleiades contains many hundreds
of fainter stars.
In many cases, the nebulae surrounding star clusters
represent material from which the stars have formed recently. However
the Pleiades nebulosity is actually an independent cloud, drifting
through the cluster at a relative speed of about 6.8 miles/second
(11 kilometers/second).
In 1890, American astronomer E. E. Barnard, observing
visually with the Lick Observatory 36-inch telescope in California,
discovered an exceptionally bright nebulosity adjacent to the bright
Pleiades star Merope. It is now cataloged as IC 349, or "Barnard's
Merope Nebula." IC 349 is so bright because it lies extremely close
to Merope--only about 3,500 times the separation of the Earth from
the Sun, or about 0.06 light-year--and thus is strongly illuminated
by the star's light.
In the new Hubble image, Merope itself is just outside
the frame on the upper right. The colorful rays of light at the
upper right, pointing back to the star, are an optical phenomenon
produced within the telescope, and are not real. However, the remarkable
parallel wisps extending from lower left to upper right are real
features, revealed for the first time through Hubble's high-resolution
imaging capability. Astronomers George Herbig and Theodore Simon
of the University of Hawaii obtained these broadband observations
with Hubble’s Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 on September 19,
1999.
Herbig and Simon propose that, as the Merope Nebula
approaches Merope, the strong starlight shining on the dust decelerates
the dust particles. Physicists call this phenomenon "radiation pressure."
Smaller dust particles are slowed down more by the
radiation pressure than the larger particles. Thus, as the cloud
approaches the star, there is a sifting of particles by size, much
like grain thrown in the air to separate wheat from chaff. The nearly
straight lines pointing toward Merope are thus streams of larger
particles, continuing on toward the star while the smaller decelerated
particles are left behind at the lower left of the picture.
Over the next few thousand years, the nebula--if it
survives the close passage without being completely destroyed--will
move on past Merope, somewhat like a comet swinging past our Sun.
This chance collision allows astronomers to study interstellar material
under very rare conditions, and thus learn more about the structure
of the dust lying between the stars.
Image Credit:
NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: George Herbig and Theodore Simon (Institute
for Astronomy, University of Hawaii)
|