Using Nircam and Miri instruments installed in the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers created high-resolution images Herbig-Haro Object 49/50 (HH 49/50) is located approximately 630 light years away from the constellation of Chamaleon.
Webb observed Herbig Halo 49/50 in high resolution near-infrared light with Nircam and Miri Instruments. Image credits: NASA/ESA/CSA/STSCI.
The Herbig-Haro object is a small bright patch of nebula associated with protostals in the star-forming region.
These structures were first observed in the 19th century by American astronomer Sherburn Wesley Burnham, but were not recognized as a distinct type of ejection nebula until the 1940s.
The first astronomers to study them in detail were George Harbigue and Guillermo Halo, and they were later named.
Herbig Halo objects are formed in very specific circumstances. Hot gas discharged by the newborn star collides with the gas, hitting it at a speed of up to 250,000 kmh (155,000 mph), creating a bright shock wave.
They come in a wide range of shapes. The basic configuration is usually the same. Twin jets of hot gases are ejected in the opposite direction from the forming stars and flow through interstellar space.
“When NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope observed it in 2006, scientists called the HH 49/50 The Cosmic Tornado because of its helical appearance, but they were unsure about the nature of the fuzzy object at the tip of the “tornado.”
“Because of the high resolution of imaging, Webb provides a different visual impression of HH 49/50 by revealing fine features of impacted regions during the runoff, revealing fuzzy objects as distant spiral galaxies and displaying the oceans of distant background galaxies.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0BDZS0IHK7Y
The HH 49/50 is part of the Chamaeleon I Cloud Complex, one of the closest active star-forming regions.
“This cloud complex is likely to resemble the environment our Sun formed,” the astronomer said.
“Previous observations of the region show that HH 49/50 runoff is away from us at a rate of 100-300 km per second, and is just one feature of the larger runoff.”
“Webb’s Nircam and Miri’s HH 49/50 observations lash out on the area with the locations of shining hydrogen molecules, carbon monoxide molecules, and dust particles represented by orange and red.”
New Webb observations probe small spatial scale details that help astronomers model the properties of jets and understand how they affect the surrounding materials.
“The arc-shaped feature of the HH 49/50 refers to the source of this spill, similar to the water wake created by speeding boats,” the researchers said.
“Based on past observations, scientists suspect that the Protostal, known as the Cederblad 110 IRS4, is a plausible driver of jet activity.”
“The CED 110 IRS4 is a Class I Protostal, located about 1.5 light years from HH 49/50.”
“Class I Protostals are young objects (tens of thousands to a million years ago) at primetime when earning Mass.”
“They usually have an identifiable disc of the material surrounding it.
“Scientists have recently studied this protostal and used Webb’s Nilkah and Milli observations to obtain inventory of the ice composition of its environment.”
“Those detailed webb images of the HH 49/50 arcs can more accurately identify the orientation to the jet source, but not all arcs return in the same direction.”
“There is an interesting outcrop feature (in the top right of the main runoff) that could be another accidental accident of another runoff associated with slow precession of intermittent jet sources, for example.”
“Or alternatively, this feature could be the result of a major spill breaking apart.”
“The accidental galaxy at the tip of HH 49/50 is a much more distant, troublesome spiral galaxy.”
“There is a prominent central bulge, represented in blue, indicating the position of the old stars.”
“The bulge also gives hints from the sidelobes that suggest this could be a thin group.”
“The reddish masses within the spiral arm indicate a warm dust location and a group of formed stars.”
“The galaxies will show sheltered bubbles in these dusty areas, similar to the nearby galaxies Webb observed as part of the Phangs programme.”
“Webb captured these two unrelated objects with a lucky alignment.”
“For thousands of years, the edge of the HH 49/50 has moved outwards, eventually appearing to hide a distant galaxy.”
Source: www.sci.news