EMBARGOED UNTIL: 9:20 a.m. PDT, June 8, 1998 NICMOS IMAGES A SPECTACULAR OUTFLOW IN THE ORION MOLECULAR CLOUD The Hubble Space Telescope's Near-Infrared Camera and MultiObject Spectrometer (NICMOS) has looked through the visible surface of the Orion Nebula, a giant interstellar gas cloud, to view an explosive pattern of molecular hydrogen emisssion underneath. The pattern is delineated by numerous gaseous streamers resembling the petals of a flower. The streamers were produced as relatively quiescent gas in the cloud was impacted by gas ejected from a young star or stars buried deep within the cloud. Astronomers have found such outflows are often associated with massive young stars, and expect the new observations to yield important information about pre-natal and infant stars and their influence on this stellar nursery. The report is being presented today by Dr. Edwin F. Erickson of NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, CA, and his colleagues Drs. Angie Schultz, Sean Colgan, David Hollenbach, Michael Kaufman (all of NASA-Ames), Erick Young, and Hua Chen (of the University of Arizona) at the American Astronomical Society meeting in San Diego, CA. The great Orion Nebula, about 1500 light years away, is a familiar sight to backyard astronomers. Behind the optically visible nebula lies the clear evidence of an outflow resulting from the birth of an unseen star (or stars). This outflow has produced streamers of molecular hydrogen gas, observed here in infrared light at a wavelength near two microns -- about four times longer wavelength than that of visible light. The infrared emission arises as the outflowing gas collides with the surrounding cloud. Dust in the molecular cloud obscures most of the cloud volume from our (human) sight, but infrared light is relatively unaffected by the dust. The NICMOS images show previously unknown delicate internal structures in the molecular hydrogen petals or fingers. Study of these features will improve astronomers' understanding of the outflow mechanism, which is closely linked to processes important in the early lives of stars. ``The HST and NICMOS give us unprecedented ability to see not only the exquisite detail of these outflow features as revealed by the molecular hydrogen emission, but also to image important features in other spectral bands.", said Dr. Edwin F. Erickson, Astrophysicist at NASA's Ames Research Center. ``The lifetime of these molecular hydrogen features is short compared with the duration of the outflows, so although we see evidence for outflows in many sources, the structure seen here is truly remarkable." The distinctive shape of the molecular hydrogen emission may be produced by the ejection of many small clumps of material, as in fireworks, or it may be the result of turbulence formed when a fast expanding wind from the young star catches up with a slower wind emitted previously. These features were dubbed "fingers" when first discovered in 1993 by Drs. David Allen and Michael Burton of the Anglo-Australian Observatory. Their observations uncovered only the fingers at the far northern end of the outflow. Earlier this year, the innermost fingers were observed by Dr. Susan Stolovy of the University of Arizona and her colleagues using NICMOS. The outflow which the astronomers studied gives rise to chemical changes in the cloud which produce vast amounts of water. Team member Michael Kaufman was part of another group which used the European Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) to show that the outflow in Orion is producing the equal of many Earth-oceans of water every day. Dr. Kaufman states: "The ISO observations showed us the chemical evidence; these new images reveal the magnificently complex structure of the outflow." Figure 1 shows a false-color image of the region observed by Dr. Erickson and his team. Red represents the molecular hydrogen gas. Green is emission from a spectral feature of atomic hydrogen not previously imaged in Orion. This light is produced by absorption of ultraviolet radiation coming from a hot star in a stellar quartet called the "Trapezium", which is just off the bottom of the picture. This infrared emission from the atomic hydrogen comes from much of the same gas that is seen in visible light, and closely resembles the images seen by Dr. Robert O'Dell of Rice University with the HST Wide Field/Planetary Camera. The blue areas in the image are 2.15 micron starlight directly emitted by stars (small blue dots) or reflected by interstellar dust grains embedded in the gas. The image is about 0.6 light years on a side. Figure 2 is a diagram identifying the various features in the image. The different wavelengths of infrared light characterize a variety of processes and penetrate the nebula to different depths. The observations will permit astronomers to assemble a more accurate model of this nearest nursery of massive star birth. For more information: Dr. Edwin F. Erickson (605) 604-5508 erickson@cygnus.arc.nasa.gov Dr. Angie Schultz (605) 604-1841 schultz@cygnus.arc.nasa.gov This press release is available over the internet at http://web99.arc.nasa.gov/~kaufman/orion_nicmos.html