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James Webb Space Telescope spies baby stars dancing in swirling gas and dust (photos)

James Webb Space Telescope spies baby stars dancing in swirling gas and dust (photos)_63f0ccc3519e0.jpeg

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is still doing its job — and doing it very well. Released today, this image shows the arms of barred spiral galaxy NGC 1433 teeming with young stars that can be seen affecting the clouds of gas and dust around them. The image was taken as part of the Physics at High Angular resolution in Nearby Galaxies (PHANGS) collaboration, of which more than 100 researchers around the world are a part.

One of the James Webb Space Telescope’s first science programs is to image 19 spiral galaxies for PHANGS with its Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI), which is capable of seeing through gas and dust clouds that are impenetrable with other types of imaging.

“The PHANGS team has spent years observing these galaxies at optical, radio, and ultraviolet wavelengths using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array, and the Very Large Telescope’s Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer,” PHANGS team member Adam Leroy of the Ohio State University said in a statement. (opens in new tab) “But, the earliest stages of a star’s lifecycle have remained out of view because the process is enshrouded within gas and dust clouds.”

Related: James Webb Space Telescope’s best images of all time 

PHANGS researchers are thrilled with the new images, which reveal previously unseen details, such as “glowing cavities of dust and huge cavernous bubbles of gas” within the galaxy’s arms.

“Areas which are completely dark in Hubble imaging light up in exquisite detail in these new infrared images, allowing us to study how the dust in the interstellar medium has absorbed the light from forming stars and emitted it back out in the infrared, illuminating an intricate network of gas and dust,” said PHANGS team member Karin Sandstrom of the University of California, San Diego. 

The researchers will continue to study star formation and inventory these newly revealed structures in the interstellar medium across the 19 galaxies they’re studying.

“That census will help us understand how star formation and its feedback imprint themselves on the interstellar medium, then give rise to the next generation of stars, or how it actually impedes the next generation of stars from being formed,” said Janice Lee, Gemini Observatory chief scientist at the National Science Foundation’s NOIRLab and affiliate astronomer at the University of Arizona, who leads the PHANGS group.

From these early observations, PHANGS has published 21 papers in a special February issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters (opens in new tab).

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