Angry nebula is really REALLY angry

Bad Astronomy
The entire universe in blog form
Nov. 16 2011 7:00 AM

Angry nebula is really REALLY angry

In the heart of the Large Magellanic Cloud (one of the Milky Way's many satellite galaxies), there lies a vast complex of gas called 30 Doradus. And inside that sprawling volume of space is the Tarantula Nebula, a star-forming region so huge it dwarfs even our own Orion Nebula. Thousands of stars are churning away in there, going through the process of being born.

And as they do, the hottest and brightest of them carve huge cavities in the nebula, heating the tenuous gas therein to millions of degrees. The result? This:

Phil Plait Phil Plait

Phil Plait writes Slate’s Bad Astronomy blog and is an astronomer, public speaker, science evangelizer, and author of Death From the Skies!  

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[Click to embiggen.]

I love this image! It's a combination of observations from the Chandra X-Ray Observatory (in blue, showing the incredibly hot gas) and from Spitzer Space Telescope (in red, showing cooler gas). Those bubbles of hot, X-ray emitting gas are constrained by the cooler gas around them, but it's likely the hot gas is expanding, driving the overall expansion of the nebula itself. However, it's also possible the sheer flood of high-energy radiation from the nascent stars is behind the gas's expansion... or it's a combination of both. Astronomers are still arguing over this, and observations like this one will help figure out who's right.

... but you know me. I love pareidolia, and there's no way you can look at this image and not see a really angry screaming face, shrieking at that blue blob hovering in its way. That's so cool!

And c'mon, NASA: you release this image two weeks after Halloween? Oh well, I'll add it to my scary astronomy gallery anyway, which is after the jump below.

Image credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/PSU/L.Townsley et al.; Infrared: NASA/JPL/PSU/L.Townsley et al.

 

 

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