The telescope photograph

The Telescope

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Originally published 2007
AuthorsGeoff Andersen
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Date of Upd.
ID2920584
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About The Telescope


In the four centuries since its invention, the telescope has transformed how humans view the universe and their place in it. . . .

Euclid telescope: First images revealed from 'dark Universe' mission

Euclid telescope: First images revealed from 'dark Universe' mission
Nov 7,2023 8:41 am

... This required new software for The Telescope s fine guidance sensor...

James Webb telescope: Baby star launches giant jets and shocks

James Webb telescope: Baby star launches giant jets and shocks
Nov 3,2023 9:41 pm

... 5m primary mirror, it s also the breadth of colour its instruments can now detect that makes The Telescope so special...

James Webb telescope makes 'JuMBO' discovery of planet-like objects in Orion

James Webb telescope makes 'JuMBO' discovery of planet-like objects in Orion
Oct 2,2023 6:31 am

... The Telescope observed about 20 pairs in a fabulously detailed new survey of the famous Orion Nebula...

James Webb: Telescope reveals new detail in famous supernova

James Webb: Telescope reveals new detail in famous supernova
Aug 31,2023 10:51 am

... Combined with The Telescope s 6...

James Webb telescope image dazzles on science birthday

James Webb telescope image dazzles on science birthday
Jul 12,2023 11:10 am

... What Webb shows us is only a tiny part of this dense region of gas and dust, which is what you d expect, given The Telescope s astonishing resolution...

Webb telescope hunts life's icy chemical origins

Webb telescope hunts life's icy chemical origins
Jan 24,2023 6:41 am

... The orange stars underneath are more mature and bright enough that they generate the distinctive six spikes that have now become familiar in Webb pictures and are artefacts of The Telescope s segmented mirror design...

Bluedot festival: Cultural icon Grace Jones to headline

Bluedot festival: Cultural icon Grace Jones to headline
Jan 23,2023 2:31 am

... " We look forward to gathering together again beneath The Telescope...

James Webb telescope traces arcs of dusty star formation

James Webb telescope traces arcs of dusty star formation
Jan 12,2023 8:31 am

... It also heard that The Telescope has its first confirmed exoplanet - the name given to planets orbiting other stars...

James Webb telescope: Baby star launches giant jets and shocks

Dec 24,2022 7:41 pm

By Jonathan AmosScience correspondent

Imagine you could go back In Time 4. 6 billion years and take a picture of our Sun just as it was being born. What would it look like?

Well, you can get a clue from this glorious new image acquired by The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).

Towards The centre of this object, called HH212, is a star coming into existence that is probably no More Than 50,000 years old.

The Scene would have looked much The same when our Sun was a similar age.

You can't actually see The Glow from The protostar itself because it's hidden within a dense, spinning disc of gas and dust.

All you get are The pinky-red jets that it's shooting out in polar opposite directions.

HH212 is sited in Orion, close to The three brilliant stars that Make Up The " belt" of The mythical hunter that gives The constellation its name. The distance from Earth is about 1,300 light-years.

Physics suggests those dramatic outflows of gas are The means by which The nascent star regulates its birthing.

" As The blobby ball of gas at The centre compacts down, it rotates. But if it rotates too fast, it will fly apart, so something has to get rid of The angular momentum, " explained Prof Mark Mccaughrean .

" We think it's jets and outflows. We think that as all The Material shrinks down, magnetic fields are pulled together And Then some of The Material Coming In through The disc gets captured on magnetic fields and is thrown out through The poles. That's why we call these structures bi-polar, " The European Space Agency senior scientific advisor told Bbc News .

The pinky-red colour denotes The Presence of molecular Hydrogen . That's two Hydrogen atoms bonded together (hence The " HH" in The protostar's name). Shockwaves are Moving through The outflows, energising them and making them glow brightly in this Webb picture, which was captured predominantly at The infrared wavelength of 2. 12 microns (that's The Second part of The protostar's name! ).

In The annotated picture above, look closely at The Left and right jets, and trace The knots of brightness in each of them. Count The bowshocks - where faster material has crashed into slower material just ahead of it.

The structures are remarkably symmetric. . except there appears to be an additional, albeit very messy bowshock on The Right .

In fact, there's probably a complementary bowshock on The Other side. There are certainly pinky hints of it in a wider version of this Webb image. It's just that The density of gas and dust In Space in that direction is thinner and So There 's less material to excite and so The Shock structure appears much more diffuse.

Astronomers have been studying HH212 for 30 years, taking pictures every now And Then to see how it's changed. As you might expect from The Webb super telescope, its new view is 10 times sharper than anything we've had before and will enable scientists to delve deeper into The processes that drive star formation.

A nice feature is to run together The entire image history to make A Movie , to see how elements in The jet structures change over time. Repeat observations mean you can also gauge The speed at which those elements are Moving - at 100km per second and more.

I said The HH stood for molecular Hydrogen , and it does. But it also stands for Herbig-Haro, after George Herbig and Guillermo Haro , who did The pioneering work on this type of object in The 1940s and 50s.

They would No Doubt be amazed by The capabilities of JWST. It's not just The sharpness of image that Webb can achieve with its 6. 5m primary mirror, it's also The breadth of colour its instruments can now detect that makes The Telescope so special.

" As we said, The main wavelength for looking at these Things - for looking at shocked molecular Hydrogen - is 2. 12 microns, or roughly four times longer than The mid-visible. But for The First Time , we now have a good colour image of this particular object because we're able to observe it at other wavelengths that you just couldn't see from ground telescopes. And that will help us get into what's really happening in The Jets , " said Prof McCaughrean.

Webb was intended to be transformative in many fields of astronomy, and The study of Herbig-Haro objects has definitely benefitted.

Look below and you can marvel at HH212's cousin, called HH211. This object, located in The Perseus constellation, is even younger, again measured in mere thousands of years. To think our Sun started out like this.

JWST is a Joint Venture between The US, European and Canadian space agencies.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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