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W40’s cradle of stars
A CRADLE OF STARS
Six hundred newly forming stars are crowded into intricate filaments of
gas and dust that makes up this stellar nursery, seen for the first time
by ESA’s Herschel space observatory.
The nebulous area coloured in blue, known as W40 or Sharpless 2-64, is
roughly 1000 light-years away in the constellation Aquila, and is about
25 light-years across.
It is a vast cloud of hydrogen gas, illuminated by the radiation
streaming out from at least three young massive stars embedded in the
cloud.
The nebula is expanding into the surrounding medium, compressing the
ambient gas on its way and triggering the formation of a second
generation of even younger stars.
In total, around 600 condensations of dust and gas have been estimated
in this field of view, the majority of which will eventually collapse to
form stars.
Already about 150 objects are in the final stages of forming stars. Once
nuclear fusion kicks in, their cores will ignite and they will become
fully fledged stars.
W40 is part of a giant ring of stars and star-forming clouds known as
Gould’s Belt that appears to circle the night sky. These stellar
nurseries are key targets for Herschel, allowing astronomers to compare
the differences in star formation from region to region and to identify
the role of the local environment in the process.
This image is from our archives; it was created from observations by
Herschel’s PACS and SPIRE instruments on 24 October 2009 and published
on OSHI in 2011.
Life and death in a star-forming cloud14 November 2012
Flying along the Vela ridge09 July 2012
Blowing bubbles in the Carina Nebula04 June 2012
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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