By ANDY FLEMING
On the left of this new image there is a dark
column resembling a cloud of smoke. To the right shines a small group of
brilliant stars. At first glance these two features could not be more
different, but they are in fact closely linked. The cloud contains huge amounts
of cool cosmic dust and is a nursery where new stars are being born. It is
likely that the Sun formed in a similar star formation region more than four
billion years ago.
This cloud is known as Lupus 3 and it lies about
600 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Scorpius (The Scorpion). The
section shown here is about five light-years across.
As the denser parts of such clouds contract
under the effects of gravity they heat up and start to shine. At first this
radiation is blocked by the dusty clouds and can only be seen by telescopes
observing at longer wavelengths than visible light, such as the infrared. But
as the stars get hotter and brighter their intense radiation and stellar winds
gradually clear the clouds around them until they emerge in all their glory.
The bright stars right of the centre of this new
picture form a perfect example of a small group of such hot young stars. Some
of their brilliant blue light is being scattered off the remaining dust around
them. The two brightest stars are bright enough to be seen easily with a small
telescope or binoculars. They are young stars that have not yet started to
shine by nuclear fusion in their cores and are still surrounded by glowing gas.
They are probably less than one million years old.
Although they are less obvious at first glance
than the bright blue stars, surveys have found many other very young stellar
objects in this region, which is one of the closest such stellar nurseries to
the Sun.
Star formation regions can be huge, such as the
Tarantula Nebula where hundreds of massive stars are being formed. However,
most of the stars in our and other galaxies are thought to have formed in much
more modest regions like the one shown here, where only two bright stars are
visible and no very heavy stars are formed. For this reason, the Lupus 3 region
is both fascinating for astronomers and a beautiful illustration of the early
stages of the life of stars.
Original Source: European Southern Observatory

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