Giant Space Cloud Holds Clues to Massive Star Birth

Giant Space Cloud Holds Clues to Massive Star Birth
This mid-infrared image of the interstellar cloud BYF 73 from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope reveals yellowish wisps to the right are remnants of gas that have been heated and are being driven off by the massive young stars within them (seen in blue). The large-scale collapse of colder gas to form a massive cluster is centered around the bright stars just to the left of the heated wisps. Full Story. (Image credit: NASA/JPL/CSIRO)

A vast interstellar cloud hasbeen caught in the act of building huge stars that would dwarf our own sun,giving scientists a tantalizing glimpse into how such massive stars form.

The cloud, called BYF 73, wasdiscovered using the CSIRO Mopra radio telescope in Australia. Made up mostly ofhydrogen and dust, the cloud sits about 8,000 light-years from Earth in theCarina constellation.

Some massivestars, more than 10 times the mass of the Earth's sun, have already beenspotted in the newfound cloud in follow-up observations by other telescopes.

Later this year, astronomersplan to use the Compact Array telescope in Australia to study the cloud in moredetail to better measure the amount of collapsing gas. They will also use theGemini South telescope in Chile to hunt for stars hidden in the cloud's dustthat can't be seen by the Anglo-Australian Telescope in Australia.

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Contributing Writer

Zoe Macintosh is a science writer who covered human spaceflight, astronomy and science for Space.com in 2010. She also covered general science for Space.com's sister site Live Science. Zoe studied English literature and physics at Smith College, where she also wrote for the Smith Sophian. Her work has also appeared in the National Association of Science Writers website.