homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Hubble finds blue space sword formation piercing through the sky

Hubble does not disappoint.

Jordan Strickler
September 2, 2021 @ 1:12 pm

share Share

Over its 31-year life span, the Hubble Space Telescope has captured plenty of iconic images. However, one of the coolest happened this week when it grabbed a shot of a rare phenomenon called a Herbig-Haro object.

This particular Herbig-Haro object, coined HH 111, lies approximately 1,300 light-years from Earth in the Orion constellation and is deeply encased in a cometary molecular cloud called L1617.

The Hubble has given us millions of iconic images. HH 111 is just the latest. (Photo: NASA)

The blue sword-like image is actually two jets of superheated, ionized gas heading into the void from opposite ends of the newborn star IRAS 05491+0247. The Hubble captured the picture using its Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) that takes photographs in both optical and infrared wavelengths. The two-camera approach means that it perceives objects at a wavelength range similar to the range of the human eye along with infrared.

While Herbig–Haro objects release light at optical wavelengths which we could see with our own eyes, in theory, they are very difficult to observe in practice because the surrounding dust and gas absorb much of the visible light. Therefore, the WFC3’s ability to observe at infrared wavelengths is important to observing Herbig-Haro objects.

These formations are small patches of nebulosity associated with new stars and are created when gas ejected by the young stars slam themselves into clouds of gas and dust at intense speeds of several hundred miles per second. The phenomena are ample in star-forming regions, and several are often seen around a lone star, aligned along its rotational axis.

The objects are transient phenomena and generally last only (in the grand scheme of space and time) a few thousand years. They can evolve visibly over quite short periods as they shift rapidly away from their parent star into the gas clouds in interstellar space.

These were first discovered in the late 19th century by Sherburne Wesley Burnham while he was looking at T Tauri but were not recognized as being a distinct type of emission nebula until the 1940s.

The first astronomers to study them in detail were George Herbig and Guillermo Haro, hence the Herbig-Haro moniker. The two were working separately on studies of star formations when they first discovered the bodies and found that they were a by-product of the star formation process.

Since its insertion into orbit in 1990, the Hubble has given us more than 1.4 million observations, along with over 18,000 peer-reviewed studies on its findings. It has detected objects as far away as 13.4 billion years off. So, it’s not really surprising that it would give us a flaming blue space sword as well. But it’s awesome nonetheless.

share Share

Evolution just keeps creating the same deep-ocean mutation

Creatures at the bottom of the ocean evolve the same mutation — and carry the scars of human pollution

Scientists Found a 380-Million-Year-Old Trick in Velvet Worm Slime That Could Lead To Recyclable Bioplastic

Velvet worm slime could offer a solution to our plastic waste problem.

Beetles Conquered Earth by Evolving a Tiny Chemical Factory

There are around 66,000 species of rove beetles and one researcher proposes it's because of one special gland.

These researchers counted the trees in China using lasers

The answer is 142 billion. Plus or minus a few, of course.

New Diagnostic Breakthrough Identifies Bacteria With Almost 100% Precision in Hours, Not Days

A new method identifies deadly pathogens with nearly perfect accuracy in just three hours.

This Tamagotchi Vape Dies If You Don’t Keep Puffing

Yes. You read that correctly. The Stupid Hackathon is an event like no other.

Wild Chimps Build Flexible Tools with Impressive Engineering Skills

Chimpanzees select and engineer tools with surprising mechanical precision to extract termites.

Archaeologists in Egypt discovered a 3,600-Year-Old pharaoh. But we have no idea who he is

An ancient royal tomb deep beneath the Egyptian desert reveals more questions than answers.

Researchers create a new type of "time crystal" inside a diamond

“It’s an entirely new phase of matter.”

Strong Arguments Matter More Than Grammar in English Essays as a Second Language

Grammar takes a backseat to argumentation, a new study from Japan suggests.