Babe, wake up, a new #JWST image just dropped.

Light from the protostar L1527 escapes above and below an edge-on protoplanetary disk (the dark line at the center of the image), creating an hourglass shape. This illuminates the cavities carved as ejected material from the star collides with the surrounding, dusty nebula.

Dust scatters shorter wavelengths of light, so blue areas are where the dust is thinner and orange areas are where the dust is more dense.

https://webbtelescope.org/contents/news-releases/2022/news-2022-055

#astronomy

NASA’s Webb Catches Fiery Hourglass as New Star Forms

WebbTelescope.org

Here is a diagram that shows the scale of this system and the flow of material. 1 au = the distance between the Earth and the Sun.

Gas falls from the nebula onto the disk surrounding the forming star, before being pulled into the star itself. The protostar and the disk also work together to eject material, which carves a cavity above and below the disk.

Credit: Tobin et al. 2012
https://arxiv.org/abs/1212.0861

A 0.2 solar mass protostar with a Keplerian disk in the very young L1527 IRS system

In their earliest stages, protostars accrete mass from their surrounding envelopes through circumstellar disks. Until now, the smallest observed protostar/envelope mass ratio was ~2.1. The protostar L1527 IRS is thought to be in the earliest stages of star formation. Its envelope contains ~1 solar mass of material within a ~0.05 pc radius, and earlier observations suggested the presence of an edge-on disk. Here we report observations of dust continuum emission and 13CO (J=2-1) line emission from the disk around L1527, from which we determine a protostellar mass of M = 0.19 +/- 0.04 solar masses and a protostar/envelope mass ratio of ~0.2. We conclude that most of the luminosity is generated through the accretion process, with an accretion rate of ~6.6 x 10^-7 solar masses per year. If it has been accreting at that rate through much of its life, its age is ~300,000 yr, though theory suggests larger accretion rates earlier, so it may be younger. The presence of a rotationally--supported disk is confirmed and significantly more mass may be added to its planet-forming region as well as the protostar itself.

arXiv.org
@kellylepo this diagram was confusing initially before I read the labels; am I correct in saying that the green parts here aren't visible in the image and the outflow (uncoloured here) is the hourglass shape?
@kellylepo Am I the only one looking for an arrow that says "you are here"? Congrats on being one of the first federated posts to show up for me. Glad to know this things on.
@kellylepo this image kinda took my breath away! Wow
@kellylepo Just taking a moment to appreciate your excellent alt text work
@matt
Thanks! Although credit really goes to the talented writers at STScI. I just copied thier excellent alt text.
@kellylepo haha OK well - excellent C&V work ;)
@kellylepo damn, thats a beautiful shot
@kellylepo Amazing! Thanks for the alert
@kellylepo
What is dust?

@Hash
Space dust is not all that disimilar from the dust you have in your house. It's small grains of things that resemble sand (silicate dust) and things that resemble soot (hydrocarbon dust).

A choose your own adventure game that I worked on where you get to choose the fate of a grain of dust:
https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/01FEGX8A3Z6QCZW7RCD1EZ6F96

Choose Your Path: Destiny of Dust

WebbTelescope.org
@kellylepo I cannot get over how beautiful this is. thank you dust particles.
@kellylepo What a majestic view! It's a wonderful time to be alive!
@kellylepo with discoveries like these happening, sometimes I think to myself, aren’t the problems of the modern day as silly and insignificant as squabble ? #weareallstardust
@kellylepo This would make a very cool bow tie print.
@iamkfro
Agreed. STARtorialist should get on this.
@kellylepo this is an incredible pic
@kellylepo wow! Beautiful, just beautiful
@kellylepo Beautiful, immediately adding it to my desktop backgrounds if JW and Hubble. Thanks for sharing!
@kellylepo no idea what any of this means but it’s such a beautiful image 😍
@kellylepo there are no words for the beauty the Just Wondrous is unveiling. To think that our Sun, the planets in our little neighborhood, you, me and everyone have possibly looked like this seed...damn.
@kellylepo is this x-ray or gamma or beta radiation? I always forget
@funnyjake2020
Infrared. The image was made with JWST's near-infrared camera.

@kellylepo so this is harmless? Cool

I would love to observe one on my own one day

@kellylepo When I hear 'dust' as it pertains to outer space, can you tell me exactly what that is made of? #jwst #webb
@glvsave31
Space dust is not all that dissimilar from the dust you have in your house. It's small grains of things that resemble sand (silicate dust) and things that resemble soot (hydrocarbon dust).
@kellylepo Wow, that is fascinating. Thanks for replying
@kellylepo
Nice pic n good info
Thank u
@kellylepo I understand very little of the description, but this is beautiful! 🔭
@kellylepo
Awesome!!! Thanks for sharing!
@kellylepo
JWST: drops new image
Me everytime: 🥹
@kellylepo Thank you very much for the quite brilliant image description. All of us, screen reader users, appreciate it! 😁

@BlindMoon38
Glad you are enjoying them! Feedback like this is why I've become so passionate about accessibility issues.

Most of the image descriptions that I use, including the one for this post, come from our brilliant science writers at the Space Telescope Science Institute.

I am one of many people on the team at STScI that worked to develop our in-house alt text style, and I review many of the official image descriptions for scientific accuracy.

@kellylepo They are quite good. I know that there are some ‘guidelines’ which recommen short, concise descriptions but, in my experience, the more details, the better. Verbosity makes me happy!
@kellylepo I know exactly how Bob Ross would have painted that.😃👍
@kellylepo Dusty Nebula was my prom date.
@kellylepo What a sight to wake up to! 🤩
@kellylepo I think this is my fave #JWST image so far,