Where In The Universe #35

Are you ready for another Where In The Universe Challenge? Take a look and see if you can name where in the Universe this image is from. Give yourself extra points if you can name the spacecraft responsible for the image. As usual, we’ll provide the image today, but won’t reveal the answer until tomorrow. This gives you a chance to mull over the image, drink some eggnog, and provide your answer/guess in the comment section — if you dare! Check back tomorrow on this same post to see how you did. Good luck and enjoy the holidays!

UPDATE (12/25): The answer has now been posted below. If you haven’t made your guess yet, no peeking before you do!!


In this holiday edition of Where In The Universe, newborn stars, hidden behind thick dust in visible light, are revealed in infrared in this image of a part of the Christmas Tree Cluster from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope. Two instruments created this image, Spitzer’s Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) and Multiband Imaging Photometer (MIPS) instruments.

Astronomers nicknamed this the “Snowflake Cluster,” the stars appear to have formed in regularly spaced intervals along linear structures in a configuration that resembles the pattern of a snowflake.

More info on this image.

Best wishes for the merriest of whatever holiday you may celebrate.

30 Replies to “Where In The Universe #35”

  1. Oh, you know, all star forming nebulae look the same to me. So I don’t have a clue which one is this one.

    I do know it’s photographed in the infrared, though, so I’m guessing the culprit is Spitzer.

  2. Hello,

    I want to make a report about a rare fenomene over The Netherlands, this evening (22:43 Dutch time)
    I saw a Orange glow, comming from the NNW, direction SSE. Thanks to the clear sky (cloudy just a few hours before) i was able to follow the glow until almost horizon.
    The speed was much faster than a plane, and no sound or smoke-trail visible.
    The glowing was intense, must be a fire. But not like a meteor, it lasted visible for over almost a minute, when it diappeared behind clouds in the distance, app. 5 degrees above horizon.
    As far as i could see the track stayed at a constant hight above earth.

    Do you know anything about an accident in space?
    To me it seemed to be a burning thing, size not know, but big enough to see over this distance. Not dimming until it disappeared behind clouds.

    With regards,
    Rob Kwekkeboom
    The Netherlands.
    Coord: 53’04”28 N, 06’23”51 E.

  3. Nebulae in the L.M.C in the southern skies ,
    as far as the spacecraft i really don’t know
    merry christmas everyone.

  4. This is obviously a Spitzer IRAC image.

    Also obviously a star-forming region, which seems to show sequential star-formation. The newest region is in the lower right, still quite buried.

    My guess (though I’m not entirely sure) is NGC 2264, the Christmas Tree Cluster, next to the Cone Nebula. The extremely bright star might by NGC 2264 IRS-2.

  5. That’s what I thought too at first “Photon Hunter”but there are some differences therefore it is the Christmas Tree Cluster!

    Best Wishes for the Holidays!!

    Maudyfish

  6. NGC 2264, the Cone Nebula and Christmas Tree Cluster created by Spitzer’s IRAC and MIPS instruments. Also known as the “Snowflake Cluster”.

    Happy Holidays 🙂

    Sofista

  7. mmm, i think it is the zone where the stars are born, responsible hubble. sorry for my horrible english.

  8. And you said something about making things harder this time, hmm…

    😉

    Cone Nebula and Christmas Tree Cluster
    Spitzer

  9. Hi! i really dont know the name of the object other than the fact that it is a Nebulous region of gas and dust..Probably captured by Spitzer or Chandra!!

  10. De acuerdo con Dan Tillmans… creo que ya la habiamos visto aqui, y si, es el árbol de navidad de Spitzer, aunque… de verdad es hermosa, Nancy. Gracias!!!

  11. Why do you morons insist on posting links to the answer? Congratulations; you can search the internet to find answers to questions. Genius.

  12. Hey astrofiend,

    Just wondering where you pull your answers from…….
    Is there a high horse nebula out there we can name after you?

    Merry xmas to all.

  13. Last one was too easy, this one’s too tough! Good balance! It’s a nebula, thaz about all I can say….

    Don’t forget to keep the “X” in XMas!

  14. You need to ask NORAD if they were tracking anything unusual since they are the official poster for St. Nikolaus’s route, Rob Kwekkeboom!!!!

  15. That´s a tough one as every wisp in a supernova remnant can have a name. It seems like a Hubble optical and Spitzer IR composite. The round dust or gas globules near the bright star look interesting. Perhaps stellar nurseries and protoplanetary disks hide inside.

  16. I actually had the Spitzer Space Telescope correct, but did not have a clue on the actual object.

  17. If you ignorant geniouses of copy-paste don’t respect the rest of us, which you obviously don’t, and aren’t bothered by the fact that what you do is to make blatantly clear to everybody that all you do know is how to use google, at least try to respect Nancy, who’ve asked repeatedly not to put pointers to the answers you dug up.

    If these kids keep refusing to play by the rules, though, the only solution is to withheld comments until the answer is posted.

  18. I thk the image come from the telescope Chandra X-ray Observatory. The image is perhaps a supernova remnant

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