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Herschel
Space Observatory

An ESA Mission
with Participation from NASA

Nhsc2010-005b

Stellar Pregnancy and Birth in the Milky Way

This image is taken looking towards a region of the Galaxy in the Eagle constellation, closer to the Galactic centre than our Sun. Here, we see the outstanding end-products of the stellar assembly line. At the centre and the left of the image, the two massive star-forming regions G29.9 and W43 are clearly visible. These mini-starbursts are forming, as we speak, hundreds and hundreds of stars of all sizes: from those similar to our Sun, to monsters several tens of times heavier than our Sun.

These newborn large stars are catastrophically disrupting their original gas embryos by kicking away their surroundings and excavating giant cavities in the Galaxy. This is clearly visible in the 'fluffy chimney' below W43.

Image Details
Date
May 6, 2010
ID
nhsc2010-005b
Type
Observation
Credit
ESA/Hi-GAL Consortium
Object Details
Name
G29.9
W43
Subject | Milky Way
Nebula Type Star Formation
Constellation
Aquila