HUBBLE
STUDIES GENERATIONS OF STAR FORMATION IN NEIGHBORING
GALAXY
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope captures this iridescent
tapestry of
star birth in a neighboring galaxy in this panoramic
view of glowing
gas, dark dust clouds, and young, hot stars. The
star-forming region,
catalogued as N11B, lies in the Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC), located
only 160,000 light-years from Earth. With its high
resolution, the
Hubble Space Telescope is able to view details of
star formation in
the LMC as easily as ground-based telescopes are
able to observe
stellar formation within our own Milky Way galaxy.
This new Hubble
image zooms in on N11B, which is a small subsection
within an area of
star formation cataloged as N11. N11 is the second
largest
star-forming region in the LMC. Within the LMC,
N11 is surpassed in
size and activity only by the immense Tarantula
nebula (also known as
30 Doradus.)
The image illustrates a perfect case of sequential
star formation in
a nearby galaxy where new star birth is being triggered
by
previous-generation massive stars. A collection
of blue- and
white-colored stars near the left of the image are
among the most
massive stars known anywhere in the universe. The
region around the
cluster of hot stars in the image is relatively
clear of gas, because
the stellar winds and radiation from the stars have
pushed the gas
away. When this gas collides with and compresses
surrounding dense
clouds, the clouds can collapse under their own
gravity and start to
form new stars. The cluster of new stars in N11B
may have been formed
this way, as it is located on the rim of the large,
central
interstellar bubble of the N11 complex. The stars
in N11B are now
beginning to clear away their natal cloud, and are
carving new bubbles
in turn. Yet another new generation of stars is
now being born in N11B,
inside the dark dust clouds in the center and right-hand
side of the
Hubble image. This chain of consecutive star birth
episodes has been
seen in more distant galaxies, but it is shown very
clearly in this
new Hubble image.
Farther to the right of the image, along the top
edge, are several smaller dark clouds of interstellar
dust with odd and intriguing shapes. They are seen
silhouetted against the glowing interstellar gas.
Several of these dark clouds are bright-rimmed because
they are illuminated and are being evaporated by
radiation from neighboring hot stars.

This image was taken with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary
Camera 2
using filters that isolate light emitted by hydrogen
and oxygen gas.
The science team, led by astronomers You-Hua Chu
(University of
Illinois) and Yäel Nazé (Universite
de Liège, Belgium) are comparing
these images of N11B, taken in 1999, with similar
regions elsewhere
in the LMC. This color composite image was co-produced
and is being
co-released by the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI)
and the Hubble
European Space Agency Information Center (HEIC).
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, The Hubble Heritage Team
(AURA/STScI), and HEIC
Acknowledgment: Y.-H. Chu (U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
and Y. Nazé (U. Liège, Belgium), L.
Christensen (HEIC), M. Kornmesser(HEIC)
|