Scientific News Space Astrophysics HUBBLE PHOTOGRAPHS 'DOUBLE BUBBLE' IN NEIGHBORING GALAXY
HUBBLE PHOTOGRAPHS 'DOUBLE BUBBLE'
IN NEIGHBORING GALAXY
A unique peanut-shaped cocoon of dust, called a
reflection nebula, surrounds a cluster of young, hot stars in this view from
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The "double bubble," called N30B, is
inside a larger nebula. The larger nebula, called DEM L 106, is embedded in the
Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of our Milky Way lying 160,000
light-years away. The wispy filaments of DEM L 106 fill much of the image.
Hubble captures the glow of fluorescing hydrogen and sulfur, as well as the
brilliant blue-white colors of the hot stars.
The very bright star at the top of the picture,
called Henize S22, illuminates the dusty cocoon like a flashlight shining on
smoke particles. This searing supergiant star is only 25 light-years from the
N30B nebula. Viewed from N30B, the brilliant star would appear 250 times as
bright as the planet Venus does in Earth's sky.
Lowell Observatory astronomer M.S. Oey and
University of Illinois astronomer Y.-H. Chu are members of a science team
studying DEM L 106. Along with their collaborators, Oey and Chu have made a
clever use of the reflection nebula around N30B. By obtaining spectroscopic
observations at various points across the nebula, they can study the spectrum of
S22 from different angles. Remarkably, they have found that the star's spectrum
changes with the viewing angle, suggesting that the star is surrounded by a
flattened disk of gas expelled from its equator.
Astronomers R. Davies, K. Elliot, and J. Meaburn,
who created the "DEM" catalogs of both the Large and Small Magellanic
Clouds, originally cataloged DEM L 106 in the 1970's. N30B was discovered in the
1950s by astronomer K. Henize, who later became a NASA astronaut.
DEM L 106 was imaged with Hubble's Wide Field
Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2). Hubble data taken in 1998 were combined with data
taken by the Hubble Heritage Team in late 2001.
Credit:
NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: M.S. Oey (Lowell Observatory) and Y.-H. Chu (U.
of Illinois)
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Publishing date: December 18, 2002
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