ALMA and VLT views of an explosion in Orion
Stellar explosions are most often associated with supernovae, the spectacular deaths of stars. But new ALMA observations of the Orion Nebula complex provide insights into explosions at the other end of the stellar life cycle, star birth. Astronomers captured these dramatic images of the remains of a 500-year-old explosion as they explored the firework-like debris from the birth of a group of massive stars, demonstrating that star formation can be a violent and explosive process too.
The colours in the ALMA data represent the relative Doppler shifting of the millimetre-wavelength light emitted by carbon monoxide gas. The blue colour in the ALMA data represents gas approaching at the highest speeds; the red colour is from gas moving toward us more slowly.
The background is an infrared image from the HAWK-I camera on ESO's Very Large Telescope. The ALMA data only cover the region marked by the box.
Предоставлено:ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO), J. Bally/H. Drass et al.
Об изображении
ID: | eso1711c |
Тип: | Коллаж |
Дата выпуска релиза [date]: | 7 апреля 2017 г. 15:00 |
Связанные релизы: | eso1711 |
Размер: | 2707 x 2824 px |
Об объекте
Тип: | Milky Way : Star : Circumstellar Material |
Категория: | Stars |
Цвета и фильтры
Диапазон | Длина волны | Телескоп |
---|---|---|
Инфракрасный Fe II | 1.64 μm | Gemini Observatory GSAOI |
Инфракрасный J | 1.25 μm | Very Large Telescope ISAAC |
Инфракрасный H | 1.65 μm | Very Large Telescope ISAAC |
Инфракрасный H2 | 2.12 μm | Gemini Observatory GSAOI |
Инфракрасный Ks | 2.2 μm | Very Large Telescope ISAAC |
Миллиметровый 216-233 GHz | 1.3 mm | Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array Band 6 |