NASA Telescope Spots Cosmic Rose in Deep Space

NASA Telescope Spots Cosmic Rose in Deep Space
This infrared image from NASA's WISE space telescope shows a cosmic rosebud blossoming with new stars, including the Berkeley 59 cluster and a supernova remnant. Read the full story. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA)

A new snapshot from NASA?s latest space telescope hasrevealed a vast cloud in deep space that is brimming with new stars inside flower-like wisps of interstellar dust.

The spectacular infrared image shows the Berkeley 59 clusterof young stars, each of which is just a few million years old, as blue dots just to the right of the center of a dust cloud awash in red and green hues, leading NASA scientists to liken itto a giant cosmic rose.

The new image was taken by NASA?snew Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE),a $320 million space observatory built to map the entire sky in unprecedenteddetail. The infrared space telescope has already recorded stunning images of dark asteroids and comets that were previously unseen because theywere hard to spot in the visible light range of the spectrum.

WISE?s view of Berkeley 59also includes a "champagne flow" of material resulting from the?supernova remnant NGC 7822, an exploded star associated with the region, saidofficials with NASA?s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) located in Pasadena,Calif. The objects are located in the constellation Cepheus about 3,300light-years from Earth.

The dust?s red glow stems from heat shed by the stars, whilegreen regions outline the fringe of the cloud. The photo?s green regions owetheir emerald hues to molecules of a compound called polycyclic aromatichydrocarbons, which can also be commonly found on Earth in the soot frombarbeque pits, exhaust pipes and other combustion effects.

NASA?s WISEtelescope is expected to complete its first all-sky map in about sixmonths.

Join our Space Forums to keep talking space on the latest missions, night sky and more! And if you have a news tip, correction or comment, let us know at: community@space.com.

Space.com Staff
News and editorial team

Space.com is the premier source of space exploration, innovation and astronomy news, chronicling (and celebrating) humanity's ongoing expansion across the final frontier. Originally founded in 1999, Space.com is, and always has been, the passion of writers and editors who are space fans and also trained journalists. Our current news team consists of Editor-in-Chief Tariq Malik; Editor Hanneke Weitering, Senior Space Writer Mike Wall; Senior Writer Meghan Bartels; Senior Writer Chelsea Gohd, Senior Writer Tereza Pultarova and Staff Writer Alexander Cox, focusing on e-commerce. Senior Producer Steve Spaleta oversees our space videos, with Diana Whitcroft as our Social Media Editor.