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Nearby
Dust Clouds in the Milky Way
April 04, 2006
The yearly ritual of spring
cleaning clears a house of dust as well as dust "bunnies,"
those pesky dust balls that frolic under beds and behind
furniture. NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has photographed similar
dense knots of dust and gas in our Milky Way Galaxy. This cosmic
dust, however, is not a nuisance. It is a concentration of
elements that are responsible for the formation of stars in our
galaxy and throughout the universe.
These opaque, dark knots of gas
and dust are called "Bok globules," and they are
absorbing light in the center of the nearby emission nebula and
star-forming region, NGC 281. The globules are named after
astronomer Bart Bok, who proposed their existence in the 1940's.
Bok hypothesized that giant
molecular clouds, on the order of hundreds of light-years in
size, can become perturbed and form small pockets where the dust
and gas are highly concentrated. These small pockets become
gravitationally bound and accumulate dust and gas from the
surrounding area. If they can capture enough mass, they have the
potential of creating stars in their cores; however, not all Bok
globules will form stars. Some will dissipate before they can
collapse to form stars. That may be what's happening to the
globules seen here in NGC 281.
Near the globules are bright
blue stars, members of the young open cluster IC 1590. The
cluster is made up of a few hundred stars. The cluster's core,
off the image towards the top, is a tight grouping of extremely
hot, massive stars with an immense stellar wind. The stars emit
visible and ultraviolet light that energizes the surrounding
hydrogen gas in NGC 281. This gas then becomes super heated in a
process called ionization, and it glows pink in the image.
The Bok globules in NGC 281 are
located very close to the center of the IC 1590 cluster. The
exquisite resolution of these Hubble observations shows the
jagged structure of the dust clouds as if they are being stripped
apart from the outside. The heavy fracturing of the globules may
appear beautifully serene but is in fact evident of the harsh,
violent environment created by the nearby massive stars.
The Bok globules in NGC 281 are
visually striking nonetheless. They are silhouetted against the
luminous pink hydrogen gas of the emission nebula, creating a
stark visual contrast. The dust knots are opaque in visual light.
Conversely, the nebulous gas surrounding the globules is
transparent and allows light from background stars and even
background galaxies to shine through.
These images were taken with
Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys in October 2005. The
hydrogen-emission image that clearly shows the outline of the
dark globules was combined with images taken in red, blue, and
green light in order to help establish the true color of the
stars in the field. NGC 281 is located nearly 9,500 light-years
away in the direction of the constellation Cassiopeia.
This wide-field
view of the star-forming region NGC 281 in the constellation
Cassiopeia was taken with the WIYN 0.9-meter telescope at
Kitt Peak National Observatory near Tucson, AZ.
Credit: T.A.
Rector/University of Alaska Anchorage and WIYN/AURA/NSF
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This back-yard
view of the constellation Cassiopeia was taken by Akira
Fujii. The center bar of the Milky Way Galaxy runs through
the middle of the constellation and the image.
Credit: A. Fujii
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Source
/ Credit: NASA, ESA, and The
Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)

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