It is filled with stars and stars to be.
Pillars of Creation was the name of the universe that the Hubble Space Telescope was able to see in 1995. One of the most productive star factories is located in the Eagle Nebula. It was high art from deep space and a visual triumph for the newly repaired and reborn Hubble, which had been marred by a blurred lens.
The james wbb telescope has turned its eyes to see through the columns and inspect the newborn babies in their cribs. There are cherry-red streaks and waves in the new view of the Pillars that were released on Wednesday.
After 20 years and $10 billion, the telescope launched on Christmas Day last year into an elliptical path around the sun and a million miles away. A complex unfolding procedure in space put the telescope into operational mode after the launch.
No human eye has ever seen colors like the ones seen by the Webb. Astronomers can see distant galaxies with their light moving away from Earth and see dust clouds in the space between Earth and the stars.
The telescope has been used for a long time. In the last few months it has changed the way we view the universe, showing us new views of the universe at the edge of time, as well as spooky pictures of planets like Neptune and Jupiter.
The constellation Serpens is named after the ancient Greek word for "serpent" and is home to the Eagle Nebula. In July and August, the naked eye can barely see the star light of the nebula.
The nebula will be gone in a few million years and you can enjoy it while you can.
The new image was made using a camera called NIRCAM. According to the news release, the telescope's observation would allow a better census of the stars and their types, and thus improve their models and theories of how stars form, escape from their dusty crches, die and pass on their substances to the future. Dust and ashes are mixed together.