UPI en Español  |   UPI Asia  |   About UPI  |   My Account
Search:
Go

Stellar 'nursery' seen in new image

|
 
Vela C stellar nursery with "butterfly" region. Credit: ESA
Vela C stellar nursery with "butterfly" region. Credit: ESA
Published: July 11, 2012 at 4:22 PM

PARIS, July 11 (UPI) -- Observations of a massive star "nursery" just 2,300 light-years from the Earth are helping astronomers study the birth of stars, the European Space Agency says.

The agency has released an image of the Vela C stellar nursery, a region where young high- and low-mass stars have heated dense clumps of gas and dust and where new generations of stars may be born.

The ESA's Herschel space observatory captured the image, a release from agency headquarters in Paris reported.

At the center of the image is a delicate blue and yellow butterfly shape that astronomers said stands out because the region's dust has been heated by a cluster of very hot, massive stars strung out along the butterfly's "body."

These stars will "live fast and die young" by burning brightly for only a short time in cosmic terms, the astronomers said.

Those with more than eight times the mass of our own Sun will explode as supernovas within 10 million years of forming, they said.

Recommended Stories
© 2012 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Order reprints
Join the conversation
Most Popular Collections
'Star Trek Into Darkness' screening NBC upfronts Met Ball 2013
'Great Gatsby' premieres in New York Spire raised on top of One WTC 2013: Celebrity break ups and divorces
Additional Science News Stories
1 of 16
Flags-In Ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery
View Caption
Staff Sgt. Jeffrey Roskos with the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, "The Old Guard," participates in the annual Flags-In ceremony, May 23, 2013, at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia. Soldiers place American flags in front of more than 260,000 gravestones in the cemetery in honor of Memorial Day. UPI/Kevin Dietsch
fark
Actual headline: "Police give patrol cars to civilians, hilarity immediately ensues"
Deaf Chinese orphan adopted by American audiologist scheduled to get new type of cochlear implant....
Zookeeper goes in to feed tiger. Succeeds
NJ Transit shuts down train line based on a sighting of a man armed with "a long barrel assault...
On this week's episode of Some People are Capable of Amazing Feats: 17-year-old homeless girl becomes...
Photoshop this intrepid photographer