Hubble’s sharpest view of the Orion Nebula
This dramatic image offers a peek inside a cavern of roiling dust and gas
where thousands of stars are forming. The image, taken by the Advanced Camera
for Surveys (ACS) aboard NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, represents the sharpest
view ever taken of this region, called the Orion Nebula. More than 3,000 stars
of various sizes appear in this image. Some of them have never been seen in
visible light. These stars reside in a dramatic dust-and-gas landscape of plateaus,
mountains, and valleys that are reminiscent of the Grand Canyon.
The Orion Nebula is a picture book of star formation, from the massive, young
stars that are shaping the nebula to the pillars of dense gas that may be the
homes of budding stars. The bright central region is the home of the four heftiest
stars in the nebula. The stars are called the Trapezium because they are arranged
in a trapezoid pattern. Ultraviolet light unleashed by these stars is carving
a cavity in the nebula and disrupting the growth of hundreds of smaller stars.
Located near the Trapezium stars are stars still young enough to have disks
of material encircling them. These disks are called protoplanetary disks or "proplyds" and
are too small to see clearly in this image. The disks are the building blocks
of solar systems.
The bright glow at upper left is from M43, a small region being shaped by
a massive, young star's ultraviolet light. Astronomers call the region a miniature
Orion Nebula because only one star is sculpting the landscape. The Orion Nebula
has four such stars. Next to M43 are dense, dark pillars of dust and gas that
point toward the Trapezium. These pillars are resisting erosion from the Trapezium's
intense ultraviolet light. The glowing region on the right reveals arcs and
bubbles formed when stellar winds – streams of charged particles ejected
from the Trapezium stars - collide with material.
The faint red stars near the bottom are the myriad brown dwarfs that Hubble
spied for the first time in the nebula in visible light. Sometimes called "failed
stars," brown dwarfs are cool objects that are too small to be ordinary
stars because they cannot sustain nuclear fusion in their cores the way our
Sun does. The dark red column, below, left, shows an illuminated edge of the
cavity wall.
The Orion Nebula is 1,500 light-years away, the nearest star-forming region
to Earth. Astronomers used 520 Hubble images, taken in five colours, to make
this picture. They also added ground-based photos to fill out the nebula. The
ACS mosaic covers approximately the apparent angular size of the full moon.
The Orion observations were taken between 2004 and 2005.
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, M. Robberto ( Space Telescope Science Institute/ESA) and the Hubble Space Telescope Orion Treasury Project Team