Phenomena

Soaring Through the Pillars of Creation

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The Pillars of Creation are an iconic feature nestled within the Eagle Nebula. For decades, the public has admired Hubble’s images of this stellar nursery, and, in this video, we get to fly between the pillars, shifting between Hubble’s visible light imagery and JWST’s infrared views. In visible light, glowing dust obscures the interior of the pillars, drawing our eyes instead to the dusty shapes eroded by the stellar winds of these young stars. In infrared wavelengths, we see further into the pillars, revealing individual stars burning at the ends of the pillars’ fingers. Being able to peer at the same problem through different techniques — here visible and infrared light — reveals more to scientists than either mode can on its own. (Image/video credit: G. Bacon et al.; via Gizmodo)

A mosaic of Hubble and JWST's views of the Pillars of Creation, in visible and infrared light, respectively.
A mosaic of Hubble and JWST’s views of the Pillars of Creation, in visible and infrared light, respectively.
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