Actively Forming Star System Lynds 483 (NIRCam Image)

At the center is a thin vertical cloud known as Lynds 483 that is shaped like an hourglass with irregular edges. At lower center are two discrete bright white, tiny blobs of light that have raced away from the hidden central stars. The top lobe shows a more prominent orange U-shape. Orange bleeds into light purple, and brighter pink at its edges. Some background stars are visible through sections of this lobe. Higher up, there is an orange arc. Some brighter pink material extends to the top edges near the center. In the lower lobe, less orange is visible. More opaque light purple is in its top third, rippling out into semi-transparent blues and pinks. The lower lobe has more texture. V-shapes left and right of the lobes are darkest, and the background stars in these areas appear orange. Elsewhere, the black background of space is clearer, speckled with tiny white stars and faint orange galaxies.

About The Object

Object Name
Lynds 483
Object Description
Young protostar and its outflows
R.A. Position
18:17:31.09
Dec. Position
-04:39:47.10
Constellation
Serpens
Distance
About 650 light-years
Dimensions
Image is about 2.2 arcmin across (0.4 light-years)

About The Data

Data Description
This image was created with Webb data from proposal: 6785 (M. Garcia Marin). Image processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI).  
Instrument
NIRCam
Exposure Dates
15 Sept 2024 
Filters
F115W, F200W, F335M, F444W, F470N

About The Image

Color Info
This image is a composite of separate exposures acquired by the James Webb Space Telescope using the NIRCam instrument. Several filters were used to sample specific wavelength ranges. The color results from assigning different hues (colors) to each monochromatic (grayscale) image associated with an individual filter. In this case, the assigned colors are:    Blue= F150W, Blue= 200W, Green/Cyan= F335M, Yellow= F444W, Red= F470N
Compass and Scale Image
At the center is a thin vertical cloud known as Lynds 483 that is shaped like an hourglass with irregular edges. At lower center are two discrete bright white, tiny blobs of light that have raced away from the hidden central stars. The top lobe shows a more prominent orange U-shape. Orange bleeds into light purple, and brighter pink at its edges. Some background stars are visible through sections of this lobe. Higher up, there is an orange arc. Some brighter pink material extends to the top edges near the center. In the lower lobe, less orange is visible. More opaque light purple is in its top third, rippling out into semi-transparent blues and pinks. The lower lobe has more texture. V-shapes left and right of the lobes are darkest, and the background stars in these areas appear orange. Elsewhere, the black background of space is clearer, speckled with tiny white stars and faint orange galaxies.

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