»  album » Ruimtevaart en Astronomie » Nevels     [Foto 51 van 79]  
  Eerste foto (keypad Home) Vorige foto (keypad Links)      Overzichtspagina Start/Stop de foto show (toets s)      Volgende foto (keypad Rechts) Laatste foto (keypad End)
 
 
PIA04939 * 1020 x 643 * (78KB)

PIA05062 * 1384 x 908 * (163KB)

PIA05732 * 3652 x 1936 * (535KB)

PIA05733 * 2499 x 779 * (99KB)

PIA08654 * 2240 x 2086 * (317KB)

Open in volledig scherm
 
PIA08655.jpg - 19937 x 6972 - (5.78MB)
Open in volledig schermDownload (5.78MB)
27-03-2007 19:11:35
pistol * 600 x 659 * (83KB)

Rotten Egg PIA04228 * 843 x 794 * (55KB)

sn CygnusLoop hst big * 600 x 625 * (195KB)

Tarantula PIA05062 * 1384 x 908 * (163KB)

tarantula2 saao * 451 x 390 * (20KB)

Catalog Page for PIA08655

PIA08655: A Slice of Orion Target Name:Orion
Mission:Spitzer Space Telescope (SST)

Spacecraft:Spitzer Space Telescope (SST)

Instrument:Infrared Array Camera (IRAC)

Product Size:19937 samples x 6972 lines
Produced By:California Institute of Technology

Full-Res TIFF: PIA08655.tif (417 MB)
Full-Res JPEG: PIA08655.jpg (5.782 MB)



Original Caption Released with Image:

Extended Orion Nebula Cloud
This image composite shows a part of the Orion constellation surveyed by
NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. The shape of the main image was designed by
astronomers to roughly follow the shape of Orion cloud A, an enormous
star-making factory containing about 1,800 young stars. This giant cloud
includes the famous Orion nebula (bright circular area in "blade" part of
hockey stick-shaped box at the bottom), which is visible to the naked eye on a
clear, dark night as a fuzzy star in the hunter constellation's sword.
The region that makes up the shaft part of the hockey stick box stretches 70
light-years beyond the Orion nebula. This particular area does not contain
massive young stars like those of the Orion nebula, but is filled with 800
stars about the same mass as the sun. These sun-like stars don't live in big
"cities," or clusters, of stars like the one in the Orion nebula; instead,
they can be found in small clusters (right inset), or in relative isolation
(middle insert).
In the right inset, developing stars are illuminating the dusty cloud,
creating small wisps that appear greenish. The stars also power speedy jets of
gas (also green), which glow as the jets ram into the cloudy material.
Since infrared light can penetrate through dust, we see not only stars within
the cloud, but thousands of stars many light-years behind it, which just
happen to be in the picture like unwanted bystanders. Astronomers carefully
separate the young stars in the Orion cloud complex from the bystanders by
looking for their telltale infrared glow.
The infrared image shows light captured by Spitzer's infrared array camera.
Light with wavelengths of 8 and 5.8 microns (red and orange) comes mainly from
dust that has been heated by starlight. Light of 4.5 microns (green) shows hot
gas and dust; and light of 3.6 microns (blue) is from starlight.


Image Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Toledo/NOAO







Laatst bijgewerkt op 21-03-2012 15:20:26
Gemaakt met aangepaste versies van JAlbum 7.4 en BluPlusPlus skin
© 2002-2012 Haartsen.nl en de respectievelijke makers van de foto's