Teardrops in the sky

Eso_potw2423a_1024

eso_potw2423a June 3rd, 2024

Credit: ESO/M. L. Aru et al.

Is it a comet? Is it a spaceship? The object in this Picture of the Week might be a bit hard to recognise at first. It is in fact a young star — but why does it have such an unusual shape?  Young stars are surrounded by a disc of gas and dust: the building materials for planets. When other very bright and massive stars are present nearby, their light heats the young star’s disc, stripping away part of its material. The teardrop-shaped object in this image, 177-341 W, is in the Orion Nebula. The stars eroding away the disc of 177-341 W are out of the frame past the upper-right corner; when their radiation clashes with the material around the young star, it creates the bright, bow-like structure seen here in yellow. The tail extending from the star towards the lower-left corner is material being dragged away from 177-341 W by the stars out of the field of view. This type of objects—ionised protoplanetary discs—are known as “proplyds”. This observation is presented in a new paper led by Mari-Liis Aru (ESO) and taken with the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile.  The colours shown in this image map different elements like hydrogen, nitrogen, sulfur and oxygen. But this is just a small fraction of all the data gathered by MUSE, which actually takes thousands of images at different colours or wavelengths simultaneously. This allows astronomers to study the physical properties of protoplanetary discs in great detail, including the amount of mass that they lose. This new paper presents MUSE observations of many other proplyds in Orion, part of a project led by Carlo F. Manara (ESO) which will help astronomers understand how stars and planetary systems form in these stellar nurseries. Links The young stellar object 177-341 W as seen with Hubble and VLT Video: A MUSE view of the 177-341 W young stellar object

Provider: European Southern Observatory

Image Source: https://www.eso.org/public/images/potw2423a/

Curator: European Southern Observatory, Garching bei München, None, Germany

Image Use Policy: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

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Image Details Image Details

Image Type
Observation
Object Name
Young Stellar Object 177-341
Subject - Milky Way
Star > Evolutionary Stage > Young Stellar Object
Eso_potw2423a_1280
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ID
potw2423a
Subject Category
B.3.1.2  
Subject Name
Young Stellar Object 177-341
Credits
ESO/M. L. Aru et al.
Release Date
2024-06-03T06:00:00
Lightyears
Redshift
Reference Url
https://www.eso.org/public/images/potw2423a/
Type
Observation
Image Quality
Distance Notes
Facility
Instrument
Color Assignment
Band
Bandpass
Central Wavelength
Start Time
Integration Time
Dataset ID
Notes
Coordinate Frame
Equinox
Reference Value
Reference Dimension
1260.0, 1192.0
Reference Pixel
Scale
Rotation
Coordinate System Projection:
Quality
FITS Header
Notes
Creator (Curator)
European Southern Observatory
URL
https://www.eso.org
Name
Email
Telephone
Address
Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2
City
Garching bei München
State/Province
None
Postal Code
D-85748
Country
Germany
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Publisher
European Southern Observatory
Publisher ID
eso
Resource ID
potw2423a
Metadata Date
2024-04-29T16:01:36+02:00
Metadata Version
1.1
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