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Hubble Finds Flame Nebula's Searing Stars May Halt Planet Formation
by Staff Writers
Baltimore MD (SPX) Nov 24, 2021

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The Flame Nebula or NGC 2024 is a large star-forming region in the constellation Orion that lies about 1,400 light-years from Earth. Hubble studied this nebula to look for protoplanetary disks, or "proplyds" - disks of gas and dust around stars that may one day form new solar systems.

Hubble found four confirmed proplyds and four possible proplyds in the nebula, but the proplyds are being worn away by the intense radiation of nearby stars and may never have the chance to form planets as a result.

Hubble also located three "globulettes" in the nebula - small, dark dust clouds that can be seen against the background of bright nebulae. These dust clouds are thought to form brown dwarfs - warm objects too big to be planets but without enough mass to become stars - and other free-floating, planetary-mass objects in our galaxy

The Flame Nebula is part of the Orion Molecular Cloud Complex, which includes such famous nebulae as the Horsehead Nebula and Orion Nebula.


Related Links
Hubble
Lands Beyond Beyond - extra solar planets - news and science
Life Beyond Earth


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One year on this giant, blistering hot planet is just 16 hours long
Boston MA (SPX) Nov 24, 2021
The hunt for planets beyond our solar system has turned up more than 4,000 far-flung worlds, orbiting stars thousands of light years from Earth. These extrasolar planets are a veritable menagerie, from rocky super-Earths and miniature Neptunes to colossal gas giants. Among the more confounding planets discovered to date are "hot Jupiters" - massive balls of gas that are about the size of our own Jovian planet but that zing around their stars in less than 10 days, in contrast to Jupiter's plodding, ... read more

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