Thursday, November 14

The James Webb Space Telescope celebrated its first year of cosmic wonder with an image of star birth

The first anniversary image from the Webb Space Telescope shows star birth as never seen before.
The first anniversary image from the Webb Space Telescope shows star birth as never seen before.

Photo: NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope / Courtesy

Maria Ortiz

The James Webb Space Telescope has celebrated its first year with one of those images of its cosmic exploration that we may have grown accustomed to seeing by now, but as we zoom in on this one, it especially shows in detail. how stars similar to the one at the center of our solar system are born, with a new incomparable image.

The photo pans across a portion of the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex, the closest star-forming region to Earth. The images were taken and edited to celebrate the first anniversary of the start of science operations for NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. Credits go to NASA, ESA, CSA, Greg Bacon (STScI).

The Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex is the closest region of star formation to Earth.

It’s a relatively small and quiet stellar nursery, but you’d never know that from just the chaotic close-up of Webb’s image.

Jets emanating from young stars crisscross the image, impacting surrounding interstellar gas and illuminating molecular hydrogen, shown in red. Some stars display the telltale shadow of a circumstellar disk, the components of future planetary systems.

The young stars at the center of many of these disks are similar in mass to the Sun or smaller.

The heaviest in this image is the star S1, which appears in the middle of a glowing cave that it is carving with its stellar winds in the lower half of the image.

This is the only star in the image that is significantly more massive than the Sun.

A whole year across the whole sky

From its first deep-field image, revealed by US President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and Nelson live from the White House, Webb has made good on his promise to show us more of the universe than ever before.. However, Webb has revealed much more than distant galaxies in the early universe.

“The breadth of science explorations that Webb is capable of becomes really clear now, when we have a full year of all-sky target data,” said Eric Smith, associate director for research in the Division of Astrophysics at NASA Headquarters. and Webb Program Scientist.

James Webb: the dazzling images of the
The Pillars of Creation are dense clouds of hydrogen and dust. /Courtesy NASA/ESA/CSA/STSCI

Photo: Courtesy

How has the first year of the James Webb space observatory been?

The observatory launched in Christmas 2021, and scientists spent the next six months preparing the telescope for action: deploying its sunshield and honeycomb array of golden mirrors, then testing the four instruments used to observe the cosmos. .

When it was ready, the Webb embarked on its journey to peer into the depths of the universe.

Beyond the impressive infrared images, what has really excited scientists are the sharp Webb spectra: the detailed information that can be obtained from light using the spectroscopic instruments of this telescope.

Webb is helping develop clues about our own origins: how Earth became the ideal place for life as we know it.

The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory and is an international program run by NASA with its partners: ESA (European Space Agency) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).

Keep reading:

– James Webb Space Telescope detects the oldest complex organic molecules in the universe
– The fascinating discovery of a 9,600 km jet of water vapor ejecting an icy moon of Saturn
– James Webb telescope obtains the best image of the “deepest and coldest ice” in space