Beige-colored fluffy nebulae, with rust-colored highlights surrounding a black central area. NASA released a new image of thousands of never-before-seen young stars on Tuesday, September 6.
This photo shows a mosaic spanning 340 light-years, captured with the James-Webb Space Telescope’s Infrared Camera (NIRCam). The stellar nursery 30 Doradus gets its nickname the Tarantula Nebula because of its long, dusty filaments.
Located in the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxy, it is the largest and brightest star-forming region near our own galaxy. It is also home to the hottest and most massive known stars.
The photo shows a large yellow star with eight long, thin points. To the right of this star is a cluster of bright, oval-shaped stars. The stars inside the cluster look like tiny pale blue sparkles.
At the bottom of the image, several arms appear to spiral out of a cloud. The structures look like a spider or a squid. Other blue or yellow eight-pointed stars, as well as distant galaxies, are dotted across the image.