WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.820 "Inside the Image: Hubble Space Telescope" 2 00:00:04.820 --> 00:00:07.207 "The Eagle Nebula" 3 00:00:07.207 --> 00:00:10.218 This is a region of interstellar space, 4 00:00:10.218 --> 00:00:13.596 gas and dust in our own Milky Way galaxy. 5 00:00:14.139 --> 00:00:17.225 That's part of a nebula we call the Eagle Nebula. 6 00:00:17.642 --> 00:00:20.937 6.500 light years away from us 7 00:00:20.937 --> 00:00:22.564 in the Serpens constellation. 8 00:00:25.233 --> 00:00:26.359 These prominent 9 00:00:26.359 --> 00:00:30.822 and now famous pillars are sometimes called the Pillars of Creation 10 00:00:30.822 --> 00:00:34.868 because they're actually a region where new stars are still forming. 11 00:00:36.536 --> 00:00:40.290 So what we can see in this region is the effects of stars 12 00:00:40.290 --> 00:00:44.836 that have already formed lighting up and ionizing this background wispy gas 13 00:00:44.836 --> 00:00:49.382 and the environment where new stars are still in the process of forming 14 00:00:49.382 --> 00:00:52.385 buried in the dense remaining columns of dust. 15 00:00:56.806 --> 00:00:58.600 We see some of these hot spots 16 00:00:58.600 --> 00:01:02.353 that are right in the region of a protostar that's forming 17 00:01:02.729 --> 00:01:05.565 at the tips of these columns and then down 18 00:01:05.565 --> 00:01:08.860 through the columns. There's one there and another one down here. 19 00:01:08.860 --> 00:01:09.986 As you look carefully, 20 00:01:09.986 --> 00:01:14.240 you can see these regions where the protostars, as they coalesce, 21 00:01:14.240 --> 00:01:17.744 are heating the surrounding dust cocoon right around them. 22 00:01:18.161 --> 00:01:22.248 But in this visible light picture, we can't see into the dust 23 00:01:22.248 --> 00:01:25.418 to really see what's going on deep inside the cloud. 24 00:01:29.255 --> 00:01:31.382 This is also an image 25 00:01:31.382 --> 00:01:35.386 of the Eagle Nebula taken with the Hubble Space Telescope. 26 00:01:35.386 --> 00:01:38.640 However, this image is dramatically different 27 00:01:38.640 --> 00:01:42.936 from what we see in visible light because the infrared channel on the Wide 28 00:01:42.936 --> 00:01:46.314 Field Camera 3 allows us to peer through 29 00:01:46.314 --> 00:01:49.526 a lot of that dust that blocks the visible light. 30 00:01:49.526 --> 00:01:54.572 And so instead of seeing all the structure of the pillars, that the visible light 31 00:01:54.572 --> 00:01:59.494 image allows us to see, this infrared view allows us to see through 32 00:01:59.494 --> 00:02:03.456 some of that dust and we can actually see into those pillars. 33 00:02:03.623 --> 00:02:06.292 And then you'll also notice we see a lot more stars 34 00:02:06.292 --> 00:02:10.004 over the whole field because the whole field has a lot of dust. 35 00:02:10.004 --> 00:02:12.757 But we can see through it with this infrared view. 36 00:02:12.757 --> 00:02:16.136 And so we see many stars in the field that are already formed. 37 00:02:16.136 --> 00:02:17.095 We see regions 38 00:02:17.095 --> 00:02:21.015 where new stars are coalescing and heating up within these dense pillars. 39 00:02:21.015 --> 00:02:22.600 And it gives us information 40 00:02:22.600 --> 00:02:25.854 that complements what we can see in the visible light image. 41 00:02:29.357 --> 00:02:34.445 The whole region is somewhat ethereal because we see dust, 42 00:02:34.445 --> 00:02:39.492 we see gas, we see this lit up region in the background, 43 00:02:39.492 --> 00:02:42.745 symphony of color and structure 44 00:02:42.745 --> 00:02:45.915 and interaction going on in this region. 45 00:02:45.915 --> 00:02:49.043 I think it's why we never really get tired of looking at it. 46 00:02:49.043 --> 00:02:59.097 "The Eagle Nebula, Pillars of Creation" 47 00:02:59.097 --> 00:03:03.641 Follow us on social media @NASAHubble