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NGC
1999 Reflection Nebula in Orion
Hubble
Takes a Close-up View, March 2,
2000
Just
weeks after NASA astronauts repaired the Hubble
Space Telescope in December 1999, the Hubble
Heritage Project snapped this picture of NGC 1999,
a nebula in the constellation Orion. The Heritage
astronomers, in collaboration with scientists in
Texas and Ireland, used Hubble's Wide Field
Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) to obtain the color
image.
NGC 1999
is an example of a reflection nebula. Like fog
around a street lamp, a reflection nebula shines
only because the light from an embedded source
illuminates its dust; the nebula does not emit any
visible light of its own. NGC 1999 lies close to
the famous Orion Nebula, about 1,500 light-years
from Earth, in a region of our Milky Way galaxy
where new stars are being formed actively. The
nebula is famous in astronomical history because
the first Herbig-Haro object was discovered
immediately adjacent to it (it lies just outside
the new Hubble image). Herbig-Haro objects are now
known to be jets of gas ejected from very young
stars.
The NGC
1999 nebula is illuminated by a bright, recently
formed star, visible in the Hubble photo just to
the left of center. This star is cataloged as V380
Orionis, and its white color is due to its high
surface temperature of about 10,000 degrees Celsius
(nearly twice that of our own Sun). Its mass is
estimated to be 3.5 times that of the Sun. The star
is so young that it is still surrounded by a cloud
of material left over from its formation, here seen
as the NGC 1999 reflection nebula.
The
WFPC2 image of NGC 1999 shows a remarkable
jet-black cloud near its center, resembling a
letter T tilted on its side, located just to the
right and lower right of the bright star. This dark
cloud is an example of a "Bok globule," named after
the late University of Arizona astronomer Bart Bok.
The globule is a cold cloud of gas, molecules, and
cosmic dust, which is so dense it blocks all of the
light behind it. In the Hubble image, the globule
is seen silhouetted against the reflection nebula
illuminated by V380 Orionis. Astronomers believe
that new stars may be forming inside Bok globules,
through the contraction of the dust and molecular
gas under their own gravity.
NGC 1999
was discovered some two centuries ago by Sir
William Herschel and his sister Caroline, and was
cataloged later in the 19th century as object 1999
in the New General Catalogue.
These
data were collected in January 2000 by the Hubble
Heritage Team with the collaboration of
star-formation experts C. Robert O'Dell (Rice
University), Thomas P. Ray (Dublin Institute for
Advanced Study), and David Corcoran (University of
Limerick).
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