A GIANT STAR FACTORY IN NEIGHBORING GALAXY NGC
6822
Resembling curling flames from a campfire, this
magnificent nebula in a neighboring galaxy is giving
astronomers new insight into the fierce birth of
stars as it may have more commonly happened in the
early universe. The glowing gas cloud, called Hubble-V,
has a diameter of about 200 light-years. A faint
tail of nebulosity trailing off the top of the image
sits opposite a dense cluster of bright stars at
the bottom of the irregularly shaped nebula. NASA's
Hubble Space Telescope's resolution and ultraviolet
sensitivity reveals a dense knot of dozens of ultra-hot
stars nestled in the nebula, each glowing 100,000
times brighter than our Sun. These youthful 4-million-year-old
stars are too distant and crowded together to be
resolved from ground-based telescopes. The small,
irregular host galaxy, called NGC 6822, is one of
the Milky Way's closest neighbors and considered
prototypical of the earliest fragmentary galaxies
that inhabited the young universe. The galaxy is
1.6 million light-years away in the constellation
Sagittarius.
The Hubble-V image data was taken with Hubble's
Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) by two science
teams: C. Robert O'Dell of Vanderbilt University
and collaborators, and Luciana Bianchi of Johns
Hopkins University and Osservatorio Astronomico,
Torinese, Italy, and collaborators. This color image
was produced by The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI).
A Hubble image of Hubble-X, another intense star-forming
region in NGC 6822, was released by The Heritage
Team in January 2001.
Credit: NASA, ESA, and The Hubble Heritage
Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: C. R. O'Dell (Vanderbilt University)
and L. Bianchi (Johns Hopkins University and Osservatorio Astronomico, Torinese, Italy) |