Star eggs. Wouldn't it be fun to live long enough to see them hatch?

Orin
That made me smile. It's a lovely thought. I think they might be a bit overdone by the time we got there though! Star Trek warp speeds are needed now to give us a chance!orin stepanek wrote:http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap061022.html
Star eggs. Wouldn't it be fun to live long enough to see them hatch?![]()
Orin
How long do you think it takes for a protostar to bloom from a star nursery to a full fledged star?BMAONE23 wrote:It is possible that we may in fact live long enough to see this. It all depends on how long the accretion process takes, then the time involved for fusion to produce the winds necessary to blow the dust away from the star in sufficient quantity to make it visible to us.
That'd be pretty sweet, but I don't suppose it's a lightswitch sort of affect.orin stepanek wrote:I'LL be delighted if one gets caught starting to twinkle.I hope somebody can answer if the probability of catching one firing up is forthcoming.
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Orin
That would be neat! I noticed some dust cleared in the top also.BMAONE23 wrote:What I think would be really interesting woud be to have the Hubble train its eye on this phenom daily for 3 to 6 months and produce a GIF from daily frames to show a movie of the actions in near real time.
That image is labeled "light echo". From the HubbleSite description ( http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archiv ... s/2006/50/ ),BMAONE23 wrote:Today's new Hubble image shows a dramatic difference with what appears to be new stellar activity at the 9:00 position in this image http://imgsrc.hubblesite.org/hu/db/2006 ... /print.jpg of variable star V838 Monocerotis (V838 Mon). There is a dramatic change in less than a year.
It's a picture of the ongoing aftermath of the 2003 flare-up described here: http://www.hypography.com/article.cfm?id=32954These are the most recent NASA Hubble Space Telescope views of an unusual phenomenon in space called a light echo. Light from a star that erupted nearly five years ago continues propagating outward through a cloud of dust surrounding the star. The light reflects or "echoes" off the dust and then travels to Earth.
After detecting a sudden outburst from the star in 2002, astronomers have followed the flash expanding at the speed of light through pre-existing dust clouds surrounding the reddened variable star