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October 21, 1998
Photo No: H98-31
Blowing Cosmic Bubbles
This NASA Hubble Space Telescope image reveals an expanding shell of
glowing gas surrounding a hot, massive star in our Milky Way Galaxy.
This shell is being shaped by strong stellar winds of material and
radiation produced by the bright star at the left, which is 10 to 20
times more massive than our Sun. These fierce winds are sculpting the
surrounding material - composed of gas and dust - into the curve-shaped
bubble. Astronomers have dubbed it the Bubble Nebula (NGC 7635). The
nebula is 10 light-years across, more than twice the distance from Earth
to the nearest star. Only part of the bubble is visible in this
image. The glowing gas in the lower right-hand corner is a dense region
of material that is getting blasted by radiation from the Bubble
Nebula's massive star. The radiation is eating into the gas, creating
finger-like features. This interaction also heats up the gas, causing it
to glow.
Scientists study the Bubble Nebula to understand how hot stars interact
with the surrounding material.
Credit: Hubble Heritage Team (AURA/STScI/NASA)
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