Caption: The
Great Galactic Black Widow: Unsuspecting prey be warned! Hiding in the darkest
corner of the constellation Circinus is a gigantic black widow spider waiting
for its next meal. For decades, this galactic creepy crawler has remained largely
invisible, cunningly escaping visible-light detection. At last, it has finally
been caught by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope's dust-piercing infrared eyes.
The spider is actually a star-forming cloud of gas and dust. In this Halloween
interactive image comparison, an hour glass-shaped insignia, typically found
on the underbelly of a black widow spider, can be seen faintly in the visible-light
image from Digital Sky Survey (DSS). As Spitzer's infrared image fades in,
the veil of galactic dust shrouding the rest of the spider is lifted to reveal
a poisonous widow. In the Spitzer image, captured by a team led by University
of Wisconsin-Madison astronomer Edward Churchwell, the two opposing bubbles
that make up the black widow's body are being formed in opposite directions
by the powerful outflows from massive groups of forming stars. The baby stars
can be seen inside the widow's "stomach" where the two bubbles meet.
When individual stars form from molecular clouds of gas and dust they produce
intense radiation and very strong particle winds. Both the radiation and the
stellar winds blow the dust outward from the star creating a cavity or, bubble.
In the case of the Black Widow Nebula, astronomers suspect that a large cloud
of gas and dust condensed to create multiple clusters of massive star formation.
The combined winds from these large stars probably blew out bubbles into the
direction of least resistance, forming a double-bubble.
Photo by: NASA/JPL-Caltech/E. Churchwell (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
and the GLIMPSE Team
Date: 2005
High-resolution 200 DPI JPEG
Caption: The
Great Galactic Black Widow: Unsuspecting prey be warned! Hiding in the darkest
corner of the constellation Circinus is a gigantic black widow spider waiting
for its next meal. For decades, this galactic creepy crawler has remained largely
invisible, cunningly escaping visible-light detection. At last, it has finally
been caught by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope's dust-piercing infrared eyes.
The spider is actually a star-forming cloud of gas and dust. In this Halloween
interactive image comparison, an hour glass-shaped insignia, typically found
on the underbelly of a black widow spider, can be seen faintly in the visible-light
image from Digital Sky Survey (DSS). As Spitzer's infrared image fades in,
the veil of galactic dust shrouding the rest of the spider is lifted to reveal
a poisonous widow. In the Spitzer image, captured by a team led by University
of Wisconsin-Madison astronomer Edward Churchwell, the two opposing bubbles
that make up the black widow's body are being formed in opposite directions
by the powerful outflows from massive groups of forming stars. The baby stars
can be seen inside the widow's "stomach" where the two bubbles meet.
When individual stars form from molecular clouds of gas and dust they produce
intense radiation and very strong particle winds. Both the radiation and the
stellar winds blow the dust outward from the star creating a cavity or, bubble.
In the case of the Black Widow Nebula, astronomers suspect that a large cloud
of gas and dust condensed to create multiple clusters of massive star formation.
The combined winds from these large stars probably blew out bubbles into the
direction of least resistance, forming a double-bubble.
Photo by: NASA/JPL-Caltech/E. Churchwell (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
and the GLIMPSE Team
Date: 2005
High-resolution 200 DPI JPEG