Astronomy: Hubble Telescope spies baby stars in their glowing stellar cocoon (photo)

[You can view the photos at the source link below. Jan]

The Hubble Space Telescope has snapped a stunning new photo of infant stars nestled in a glowing cocoon of gas and dust.

The bright clouds of dust and gas captured in the new Hubble photo represent a nebula, which is a dense interstellar region where new stars form. This particular nebula, known as RCW 7, is located just over 5,300 light-years from Earth in the constellation Puppis.

High-energy ultraviolet (UV) radiation emitted by the young, massive stars ionizes hydrogen in the nebula, creating the soft pinkish glow among the curling clouds. This region of activity is known as a H II region, according to a statement from NASA.

"Under the influence of gravity, parts of these molecular clouds collapse until they coalesce into very young, developing stars, called protostars, which are still surrounded by spinning discs of leftover gas and dust," NASA officials said in the statement. "The protostars forming in RCW 7 are particularly massive, giving off strongly ionizing radiation and fierce stellar winds that transformed the nebula into a H II region."

The new Hubble photo, which was released on June 21, is part of a study on a massive and very young stellar pair, or protostellar binary, named IRAS 07299-1651, which is tucked in toward the top of the nebula.

The photo was taken using Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 in near-infrared light, which features relatively long wavelengths that allow the light to pass through much of the gas and dust in RCW 7.

"The creation of an H II region marks the beginning of the end for a molecular cloud like RCW 7. Within only a few million years, radiation and winds from the massive stars will gradually disperse the nebula’s gas — even more so as the most massive stars come to the end of their lives in supernova explosions," NASA officials said in the statement. "New stars in this nebula will incorporate only a fraction of the nebula’s gas; the rest will spread throughout the galaxy to eventually form new molecular clouds."

The new image also captures stars located in the telescope’s line of sight between the nebula and our solar system. These stars appear larger because they lie in the foreground of the image, and are not part of the nebula.

Source: https://www.space.com/infant-stars-stellar-cocoon-hubble-telescope-photo?utm_term=AF536F6D-055D-443A-91F7-FD448D0CCA73&lrh=4cd1bd23c622eeb1274411ac3b55b43215b8c098a20f14a3285c9e8ae13a98ca&utm_campaign=58E4DE65-C57F-4CD3-9A5A-609994E2C5A9&utm_medium=email&utm_content=48248DFA-EB74-4B4A-B41E-0744E07D5CC2&utm_source=SmartBrief

Scientists find signs of earliest life on Earth after 3.5 billion-year-old discovery

Researchers have discovered biological material some 3.5 billion years-old hidden in remote, crystal-clear lagoons.

Located more than 12,000 feet above sea level on Argentina’s Atacama Plateau near the Chile-Bolivia border are shallow lakes that are home to stromatolites – rocky masses of calcareous material and sediment formed by the prolific growth of photosynthesising microbes called cyanobacteria.

Stromatolites (Greek for "layered rock") are living fossils found only in a few salty lagoons or bays on Earth. Their unique ecosystem provides a glimpse into what Earth was like billions of years ago, when primitive organisms first appeared on the planet.

Geologist Brian Hynek said: "They could be one of the best modern examples of the earliest signs of life on Earth. It’s unlike anything I’ve ever seen or, really like anything any scientist has ever seen. It’s just amazing that you can still find undocumented things like that on our planet."

Hynek first noticed the network of lagoons last April, when he was looking through satellite images of the Atacama Plateau. He and microbiologist Maria Farias proceeded to drive as far as they could towards the formations and hike several miles in the sun.

"In some places, we were sinking up to our knees in salt slush," Hynek recalled. Some of the stromatolites they found were about 15 feet across and several feet high, resembling giant green mounds.

He believes the unforgiving environment of the Atacama Plateau – a cold, desolate zone where rainfall is rare and sun exposure is nearly constant – is similar to the harsh conditions of ancient Earth, when oxygen was almost nonexistent in the atmosphere. And he hopes the discovery may aid the search for life on Mars.

"If life ever evolved on Mars to the level of fossils, it would have been like this. Understanding these modern communities on Earth could inform us about what we should look for as we search for similar features in the Martian rocks," Hynek explained.

Hynek and co-researcher microbiologist Maria Far plan to carry out further experiments but an international company has already earmarked the area for lithium mining, so time is running out.

"This entire, unique ecosystem could be gone in a matter of years," Hynek said. "We’re hoping that we can protect some of these sites, or at least detail what’s there before it’s gone or disturbed forever."

Modern stromatolites can be found elsewhere on Earth today, such as off the coast of the Bahamas and in parts of Australia, but they tend to be small. In contrast, their ancient predecessors could stretch to 20 feet tall and grew by sucking in calcium and carbon dioxide from the surrounding water.

Source: https://www.msn.com/en-za/news/world/scientists-find-signs-of-earliest-life-on-earth-after-3-5-billion-year-old-discovery/ar-AA1lCAj4?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=0a3c662f54b541cca2956689a1ddc274&ei=69

Astronomy: What happened when the moon turned itself inside out billions of years ago?

Over 4.2 billion years ago, the moon turned itself inside out to create the lunar surface that has become familiar to humanity.

Most scientists would agree the moon was created around 4.5 billion years ago, when another massive body in the solar system smashed into Earth, flinging molten material into space that coalesced as our natural satellite.

How the birth of the moon proceeded after this violent start, however, has been described as "more of a choose-your-own-adventure novel" by a team of scientists from the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory (LPL).

They say there are many possible paths Earth’s natural satellite could have taken to form in full, ultimately leading to the moon-Earth system we see today. The team of course has its own ideas about the major incidences that might have formed the moon. The researchers say rock samples collected during the Apollo mission, for instance, may indicate there was a time when the moon "flipped inside out."

This result, if true, might also solve a lingering mystery about the moon’s composition.

"Our moon literally turned itself inside out," research co-author and LPL associate professor Jeff Andrews-Hanna said in a statement. "But there has been little physical evidence to shed light on the exact sequence of events during this critical phase of lunar history, and there is a lot of disagreement in the details of what went down — literally."

Titanium on the near side of the moon?

Basaltic lava rocks brought back from the moon have shown surprisingly high concentrations of titanium. In addition to this, satellite observations have revealed that titanium-rich volcanic rocks are primarily located at the lunar nearside. This left scientists scratching their heads about how these particular rocks got there and aren’t more widely dispersed.

The University of Arizona team suggests the moon formed rapidly, leaving it entirely covered with a hot magma ocean at first. As this ocean cooled and hardened, it would have formed the outer layers of the moon, including its mantle and crust. Yet, at lower layers, the infant moon would have still been in turmoil.

Models of moon formation suggest the last remains of this giant lunar ocean crystallized into dense materials including ilmenite, a mineral rich in iron and titanium.

"Because these heavy minerals are denser than the mantle underneath, they create a gravitational instability, and you would expect this layer to sink deeper into the moon’s interior," said research leader and former LPL doctoral candidate Weigang Liang, said.

Three diagrams of the moon, slightly overlain.

Questions remain: Would this material sink all at once as a single "blob" after the moon solidified, or a little at a time as smaller blobs? And, if it sank within the interior of the moon on a global scale, how did some of it rise to carry titanium to the moon’s nearside?

"Without evidence, you can pick your favorite model," researcher co-lead author and German Aerospace Center scientist Adrien Broquet said in the statement. "Each model holds profound implications for the geologic evolution of our moon."

Co-author and Peking University scientist Nan Zhang previously developed models that suggested a giant impact on the moon could have caused a dense layer of titanium-rich material beneath the crust to shift to its nearside. Once there, this material would have sunk, formed sheet-like slabs and cascaded to the interior of the moon, leaving a remnant beneath the crust in the form of intersecting bodies of dense titanium-rich deposits.

"When we saw those model predictions, it was like a lightbulb went on," Andrews-Hanna said. "We see the exact same pattern when we look at subtle variations in the moon’s gravity field, revealing a network of dense material lurking below the crust."

The GRAIL of moon formation models
To solidify its molten theories of titanium-rich ilmenite material and observations of the moon, the team turned to data surrounding lunar gravity anomalies detected by NASA’s Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) dual-spacecraft mission.

"Analyzing these variations in the moon’s gravity field allowed us to peek under the moon’s surface and see what lies beneath," Broque said.

This confirmed that GRAIL data conforms with ilmenite layer simulations.

Such confirmation also showed that gravity-field observations could be used to trace the distribution of ilmenite remnants left behind after a majority of the dense layer had sunk to the deep interior of the moon.

"Our analyses show that the models and data tell one remarkably consistent story," Liang said. "Ilmenite materials migrated to the nearside and sunk into the interior in sheet-like cascades, leaving behind a vestige that causes anomalies in the moon’s gravity field, as seen by GRAIL."

An artist’s illustration shows two solar-winged spacecraft connected by wiggly lines representing communication. The lines extend to Earth; the spacecraft float above the moon.

The team was also able to determine when the moon flipped inside out. They say the interruption of gravity anomalies by large and ancient lunar impact basins indicates the ilmenite-rich layer sank prior to these impacts. This "cross-cutting" means the sinking event would have happened earlier than 4.22 billion years ago, indicating that the sinking could have triggered volcanism, which was seen at later times across the lunar surface.

This research also adds nuance to an interesting picture of the moon we see today. The overturn of the lunar mantle billions of years ago would have led to the creation of a dark region known as the Oceanus Procellarum region, as well as on the side of the moon close to Earth.

This area of the moon is lower in elevation and has a thinner crust that’s mostly blanketed by lava flows unlike the thicker crust of far side regions of the moon. It also has a higher concentration of rare elements like titanium and thorium. "The moon is fundamentally lopsided in every respect," Andrews-Hanna said. "For the first time, we have physical evidence showing us what was happening in the moon’s interior during this critical stage of its evolution, and that’s really exciting.

"It turns out that the moon’s earliest history is written below the surface, and it just took the right combination of models and data to unveil that story."

Broquet added: "The vestiges of early lunar evolution are present below the crust today, which is mesmerizing.

"Future missions, such as with a seismic network, would allow a better investigation of the geometry of these structures."

The findings could also help inform future investigations of our loyal lunar companions if and when, in 2025, NASA’s Artemis III mission returns humanity to the moon for the first time since the Apollo missions drew to an end 50 years ago.

"When the Artemis astronauts eventually land on the moon to begin a new era of human exploration," Liang concluded. "We will have a very different understanding of our neighbor than we did when the Apollo astronauts first set foot on it."

The team’s research is published in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Source: https://www.space.com/moon-inside-out-billions-years-ago