The iconic ‘Pillars of Creation’ glow anew in infrared light.
(Image: © NASA, ESA / Hubble and the Hubble Heritage Team)
Spearing the sky like monolithic elephant trunks, the “Pillars of Creation” are a vast region of star-forming material located in the Eagle Nebula, about 6, light-years

The Pillars, which span about 5 light-years in length (that’s about 3.5 times the diameter of our solar system), are natural incubators of star formation, thanks to their many dense pockets of hydrogen gas , , According to NASA As ever greater quantities of gas and dust pile into a single, gravitationally-dense area, that area heats up under the weight of the gathering material and may turn into the seeds of a star – also called a “protostar.” If a protostar continues gathering mass and increasing in temperature enough to spark a nuclear reaction at its core, a full-fledged star is born.
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Perhaps that makes images like this one even more special. We will never see the Pillars of Creation exactly like this ever again.
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(Originally published on (Live Science)
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