Hubble Movies Provide Unprecedented View of Supersonic Jets from Young Stars

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The glowing, clumpy streams of material shown in these NASA Hubble Space Telescope images are the signposts of star birth.

Ejected episodically by young stars like salvos from a cannon, the blobby material zips along at more than 440,000 miles (770,000 kilometers) an hour. Called Herbig-Haro or HH objects, these speedy outflows have a bumpy ride through space.

When fast-moving blobs “rear-end” slower gas, bow shocks (the blue features) arise as the material heats up. Bow shocks are glowing waves of matter similar to waves produced by the bow of a ship plowing through water. In HH 2, at lower right, several bow shocks (the compact blue and white features) can be seen where fast-moving clumps bunch up like cars in a traffic jam. In HH 34, at lower left, a grouping of merged bow shocks reveals regions that brighten and fade over time as the heated material cools, shown in red, where the shocks intersect.

In HH 47, at top, a long jet of material has burst out of a dark cloud of gas and dust that hides the newly forming star. The blue, fan-shaped region at left is the edge of a cavity illuminated by the fledgling star. A massive clump of jet material collides with upstream gas, creating the white bow-shaped shock wave at right.

These images are part of a series of time-lapse movies astronomers have made showing the outflows’ motion over time. The movies were stitched together from images taken over a 14-year period by Hubble’s Wide Field Planetary Camera 2. Hubble followed the jets over three epochs. Observations of HH 2 were made from 1994, 1997, and 2007; HH 34 from 1994, 1998, and 2007; and HH 47 from 1994, 1999, and 2008.

The outflows are roughly 1,350 light-years from Earth. HH 34 and HH 2 reside near the Orion Nebula, in the northern sky. HH 47 is located in the southern constellation Vela.
Object Names: HH 47, HH 34, HH 2
Image Type: Astronomical/Annotated

To read more go to: www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/science/supersonic-jets…

Credit: NASA, ESA, and P. Hartigan (Rice University)..NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.




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Milky Way from the Trail



Milky Way from the Trail, originally uploaded by dmzajac2004-.

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Copyright © 2011 Deborah M. Zajac. All Rights Reserved.
On my second night hike up to Clouds Rest with some night sky photographer enthusiast we stopped on this great granite rock to take some photographs of the night sky. With a crescent moon the sky was a lot darker than my first hike up, and the Milky Way was more visible. I’ve been wanting to capture a great Milky Way shot for a long time. I don’t think I have nailed it yet, but I’m closer. The most amazing thing about this shot is that I could not see with my naked eye the orange and yellow light pollution, but the camera could. When I looked at my playback after the first shot I was thrilled with the color and the texture in the clouds. I hoped it looked as good at home on my computer.
Does anyone have any tips on post editing Milky Way shots to bring out the best of it? I tweaked fill, blacks, clarity, vibrance, sharpened, and a little recovery.

It was a great hike, and I made it up that last bit to the top and beyond. I’ve got a couple of more photos I’ll share from this hike and still one or two from the first hike up.

Hike stats:
Total Miles 14.2
Elevation Gain 3,687ft
Total Time hike and photography 13 hours
Not a lot of sleep on this trip either, but I did doze on the mountain while my camera worked, and in the car on the way home. I left home at 4pm on Aug. 23rd and got home just after 6PM on Aug. 24th. Yes, I’d do it again.

Nikon D300s| Nikkor 17-35 @ 17mm| f2.8| 30 seconds| ISO 1600| Manual Mode| Tripod w/release cable

The Dawn of a New Day from Cloud’s Rest

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Copyright © 2011 Deborah M. Zajac. All Rights Reserved.

Dawn unfolding her light across the mountains. There is something magical about the way that Alpine glow can reach across the span of a valley and warm, and fill me with inner peace and harmony. In these moments when nothing else exists but me, nature, and God…it’s euphoria.

Nikon D300s| Nikkor 18mm ai-s| f22| 1/13sec| ISO 400| Manual Mode| Tripod| Cable Release
Taken from Cloud’s Rest, Yosemite National Park. The Sawtooth Mountain Range is to the right.