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ScienceMagazine's video: Sword Of Orion

@Sword Of Orion
http://facebook.com/ScienceReason ... The Hidden Universe of the Spitzer Space Telescope (Episode 3): A Stellar Census of the Sword of Orion. This is the Hidden Universe of the Spitzer Space Telescope, exploring the mysteries of infrared astronomy with your host Dr. Robert Hurt. New images of the Orion Nebula show thousands of nascent solar systems. The Spitzer images have unsheathed the Sword of Orion and led astronomers to a treasure trove of baby stars within. --- Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason: • http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience • http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV • http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker • http://www.youtube.com/RationalHumanism --- 'The Hidden Universe' video series showcases some of the most exciting discoveries in infrared astronomy from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Looking beyond the visible spectrum of light, Spitzer can see a whole new universe of dust and stars hidden from our Earth-bound eyes. Orion, the hunter, is one of the best-known constellations in the sky. Hanging beneath its distinctive three belt stars is a glowing patch known as the Sword of Orion, or M42. At a distance of about 1,300 light years, this nearby stellar nursery is easily visible to the naked eye. But for astronomers studying the Sword of Orion, visible light alone just doesnt cut it. We see only the small patches where young stars heat the surrounding gas and make it glow. The bulk of the Orion cloud complex is a mostly dark swath of dust and gas containing the mass of about 100,000 Suns and spanning 250 light years. The infrared eye of the Spitzer Space Telescope can see this dust directly and identify the vast population of infant stars buried within. Spitzer can find young stars by detecting the infrared glow from their surrounding dusty disks. The very youngest stars are gobbling up material from their disks and growing larger. Later, the left-over disks around adolescent stars can provide the resources for building planets. • http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/ .

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This video was published on 2010-04-06 20:57:22 GMT by @ScienceMagazine on Youtube. ScienceMagazine has total 53.4K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 68 video.This video has received 296 Likes which are lower than the average likes that ScienceMagazine gets . @ScienceMagazine receives an average views of 31.9K per video on Youtube.This video has received 21 comments which are lower than the average comments that ScienceMagazine gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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