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«Хаббл» изучил космический мазер в соседней области звездообразования

   The protostellar object OH 339.88-1.26, which lies 8 900 light-years from Earth in the constellation Ara, lurks in this dust-filled image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Winding lanes of dark dust thread through this image, which is also studded with bright stars crowned with criss-crossing diffraction spikes. The dark vertical streak at the centre of this image hides OH 339.88-1.26, which is an astrophysical maser. A maser — which is an acronym for “microwave amplification by stimulated emission of radiation” — is essentially a laser that produces coherent light at microwave wavelengths. Such objects can occur naturally in astrophysical situations, in environments ranging from the north pole of Jupiter to star-forming regions such as the one pictured here. This image comes from a set of Hubble observations that peer into the hearts of regions where massive stars are born to constrain the nature of massive protostars and test theories of their formation. Astronomers turned to Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 to explore five intermediate-mass protostars at infrared wavelengths. The Hubble observations were supported by other state-of-the-art observatories including ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. ALMA is composed of 66 moveable high-precision antennas which can be arranged over distances of up to 16 kilometres on a plateau perched high in the Chilean Andes. Further data were contributed by the Stratospheric Observatory For Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), which is a telescope that — until recently — operated out of a converted 747 aircraft. [Image Description: The field is field with hundreds of bright stars. They are primarily blue in colour, with scattered smaller stars visible in yellow/orange. The background is dominated by cloudy grey dust, with permeating regions of dark black and orange.] Александр Шереметьев
The protostellar object OH 339.88-1.26, which lies 8 900 light-years from Earth in the constellation Ara, lurks in this dust-filled image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Winding lanes of dark dust thread through this image, which is also studded with bright stars crowned with criss-crossing diffraction spikes. The dark vertical streak at the centre of this image hides OH 339.88-1.26, which is an astrophysical maser. A maser — which is an acronym for “microwave amplification by stimulated emission of radiation” — is essentially a laser that produces coherent light at microwave wavelengths. Such objects can occur naturally in astrophysical situations, in environments ranging from the north pole of Jupiter to star-forming regions such as the one pictured here. This image comes from a set of Hubble observations that peer into the hearts of regions where massive stars are born to constrain the nature of massive protostars and test theories of their formation. Astronomers turned to Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 to explore five intermediate-mass protostars at infrared wavelengths. The Hubble observations were supported by other state-of-the-art observatories including ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. ALMA is composed of 66 moveable high-precision antennas which can be arranged over distances of up to 16 kilometres on a plateau perched high in the Chilean Andes. Further data were contributed by the Stratospheric Observatory For Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), which is a telescope that — until recently — operated out of a converted 747 aircraft. [Image Description: The field is field with hundreds of bright stars. They are primarily blue in colour, with scattered smaller stars visible in yellow/orange. The background is dominated by cloudy grey dust, with permeating regions of dark black and orange.] Александр Шереметьев

Космический телескоп наблюдал за протозвездным объектом OH 339.88-1.26.

Команда телескопа «Хаббл» опубликовала снимок области звездообразования, расположенной на расстоянии 8 900 световых лет от Земли в созвездии Ара. На изображении видны сложные узоры темной пыли, в которых скрывается протозвездный объект.

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Протозвездный объект OH 339.88-1.26. Изображение: ESA/Hubble & NASA, J. Tan

OH 339.88-1.26 — протозвездный объект, который представляет собой космический мазер. Так называют источники когерентного вынужденного микроволнового излучения, связанные с различными астрономическими объектами. Такое излучение генерируется в молекулярных облаках, на некоторых планетах и кометах.

В молекулярных облаках в ряде случаев возникают условия для формирования когерентного излучения, а лазером накачки служит космическое излучение. Наблюдения «Хаббла» за OH 339.88-1.26 — часть исследования областей, где формируются массивные звезды. Изучая протозвезды и процессы их формирования, астрономы стремятся понять природу этих массивных объектов и проверить существующие теории.

Чтобы сделать это изображение, широкоугольная камера «Хаббла» (WFC3) наблюдала за пятью протозвездами промежуточной массы в инфракрасных волнах. Собранные данные астрономы дополнили результатами исследований с помощью наземного радиотелескопа ALMA в Чили и стратосферной обсерватории НАСА SOFIA.

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