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| NASA/JPL-Caltech/Z. Balog (Univ. of Ariz./Univ. of Szeged) |
Every Rose Has a Thorn
This infrared image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope shows the Rosette nebula, a pretty star-forming region more than 5,000 light-years away in the constellation Monoceros. In optical light, the nebula looks like a rosebud, or the "rosette" adornments that date back to antiquity.
But lurking inside this delicate cosmic rosebud are so-called planetary "danger zones" (see sphere illustrations). These zones surround super hot stars, called O-stars (blue stars inside spheres), which give off intense winds and radiation. Young, cooler stars that just happen to reside within one of these zones are in danger of having their dusty planet-forming materials stripped away.
While O-star danger zones were known about before, their parameters were not. Astronomers used Spitzer's infrared vision to survey the extent of the five danger zones shown here. The results showed that young stars lying beyond 1.6 light-years, or 10 trillion miles, of any O-stars are safe, while young stars within this zone are likely to have their potential planets blasted into space.
Radiation and winds from the super hot stars have collectively blown layers of dust (green) and gas away, revealing the cavity of cooler dust (red). The largest two blue stars in this picture are in the foreground, and not in the nebula itself.
This image shows infrared light captured by Spitzer's infrared array camera. Light with wavelengths of 24 microns is red; light of 8 microns is green; and light of 4.5 microns is blue.
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| About the Object (1) | | Object name: | NGC2244, Rosette Nebula | | Object type: | Star-Forming Region | | Position (J2000): | RA: 06h 31m 58.00s Dec: 4° 54' 51.00" | | Distance: | 5200 light-years | | Constellation: | Monoceros |
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About the Data
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Spitzer Data
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| Image Credit: | NASA/JPL-Caltech/Z. Balog (Univ. of Ariz./Univ. of Szeged) | | Instrument: | IRAC + MIPS | | Wavelength: | 4.5 microns, 8.0 microns, and 24 microns | | Exposure Date: | 2004/03/09, 2004/03/09, 2005/05/16 | | Exposure Time: | 20.8s, 20.8s, 80.0s | | Image scale: | 34 x 29 arcmin | | Orientation: | North is 85.8 deg CW from up | | Release Date: | 2007/04/18 |
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Observers
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Zoltan Balog (University of Arizona/University of Szeged)
James Muzerolle (University of Arizona)
G. H. Rieke (University of Arizona)
Kate Y. L. Su (University of Arizona)
Eric T. Young (University of Arizona)
Tom Megeath (University of Toledo, Ohio) |
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Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Z. Balog (Univ. of Ariz./Univ. of Szeged)
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