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Chamaeleon Cloud I Caught by Hubble Camera Surrounded by Black Dust

Chamaeleon Cloud I is the star that goes into the Chamaeleon Cloud Complex. The star was caught by the Hubble telescope emitting a black dust cloud.

Usually, these black dust clouds are where a star is formed. Interestingly, all of this happened and was clearly captured by Hubble’s high-resolution camera.

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Image of Chamaeleon Cloud I Captured by Hubble Camera

The Hubble Space Telescope, which is the result of a project between NASA, ESA, and CSA, has yet again produced incredible images. This time Hubble managed to capture one of the stars from the Chamaeleon III star region.

The Chamaeleon Cloud Complex Formation itself is the place where stars are born. Stars are formed in very large collections of molecular hydrogen called molecular clouds.

The instability that occurs in the cloud makes the gas eventually explode in the molecular cloud.

When the combined material is sufficient and has a density to a critical stage, the star will begin to live.

However, the muscular cloud usually doesn’t exist alone, but comes together with the Chamaeleon Cloud Complex.

Chamaeleon Complex contains several stars named Chameleon I, II, and III which are commonly shortened to Cha I, Cha II, and Cha III.

In this capture, Hubble shows one of the stars named Cha I emitting black dust and clouds, where stars are born. There is also a dazzling reflection coming from the nebula.

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The nebula glows in the bright blue light of the stars and is bound together. The bundle of stars has the object name Herbig Haro.

Herbig Haro’s object glowed dimly. The object causes relativistic jets of ionizing gas that the young star produces to collide with a nearby cloud of dust and gas.

At the bottom of the image, the Herbig Haro object can be seen with bright clumps of interstellar gas resulting from the jet speed of the baby protostar in the center of the orange cloud.

Cha I . Research

Previously, this research from Chamaeleon Cloud I was included in a project that aims to detect brown dwarfs. This is an object that lies between the line of gas giants and stars.

The researchers predict that brown dwarves are failing stars. In fact, a brown dwarf object also has the potential to be the wildest planet ever or a wandering interstellar without a main star.

The Hubble Space Telescope has now found six new brown dwarf candidates.

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The discovery will greatly help astronomers understand more about this object and its surroundings.

This capture again makes the Hubble telescope one of the most deserving and sophisticated tools in the world of astronomy.

With its 315 million pixel camera, Hubble has managed to capture images of space objects. Including Chamaeleon cloud I, which is giving birth to new stars, is an extraordinary phenomenon. (R10/HR-Online)

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