JWST: Herbig-Haro 49/50
JWST: Herbig-Haro 49/50
JWST: Herbig-Haro 49/50
JWST: Herbig-Haro 49/50

JWST: Herbig-Haro 49/50

🚀 Print Premium Astrography™

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Czas wysyłki/dostawy: Czas wysyłki i dostawy nie jest tym samym, co produkcja Twojego zamówienia.


Standardowy czas produkcji
: do 5 dni roboczych (bez weekendów i świąt).

Czas dostawy: Średni czas dostawy wynosi od 3 do 7 dni roboczych.

Ubezpieczenie wysyłki (opcjonalne): dzięki niemu Twoje zamówienie jest chronione przed utratą, kradzieżą lub uszkodzeniem — nawet po rozpakowaniu. Ponadto nasz szybki proces reklamacyjny zapewnia bezproblemowe rozwiązania (wyślemy zamiennik bez zadawania zbędnych pytań).

W naszym małym studiu kreatywnym ręcznie przygotowujemy dla Ciebie każdy wydruk. Nie mamy na półkach przygotowanych wcześniej gotowych posterów. Priorytetem jest dla nas Twoje zadowolenie, dlatego wybacz nam, jeśli czasem trochę się spóźnimy.

Opóźnienia w dostawie? Spowodowane mogą być świętami, globalnymi wydarzeniami lub nieprzewidywanymi zdarzeniami. Jeśli zmienisz zdanie, możesz odesłać swoją przesyłkę w ciągu 14 dni, bez żadnych pytań. Sprawdź szczegóły dostawy i zwrotów.

Klienci spoza UE mogą ponieść opłaty celne na podstawie lokalnych przepisów. Astrography nie pokrywa tych opłat.

Twoje zaufanie znaczy dla nas więcej niż cały Wszechświat! 🚀

    We curated a premium print network, so your cosmic prints are crafted at local labs in your region, ensuring you receive them quickly without paying customs duties or taxes, or at least reducing them.

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    Manufacturer contact information
    Name: Astrography Sp. z o.o.
    Email address: support@astrography.com
    Postal address: ul. Poznańska 55, loc. 28 (Nordspace), 05-850 Jawczyce, Poland/EU

    Age restrictions: This product is made for adults
    EU Warranty: 2 year warranty in EEA and UK, established by Directive 1999/44/EC.

    Other compliance information: Meets the small parts and magnetic flux index level requirements. Inks: Water-based pigment inks (EPSON UltraChrome Pro12, Canon Lucia PRO Ink) or eco-solvent inks (UltraChrome GS3).

    Hazards Identification
    Classification (EC 1272/2008):
    Not classified as hazardous. Adverse Effects: None identified. 

    Please note that this product is suitable for indoor use only. Meets the lead level requirements.

    Credits: NASA

    A Star Being Born. A Galaxy Passing By. One Perfect Frame.

    James Webb reveals Herbig-Haro 49/50—a violent, beautiful collision of jets and stardust that shows us how our Sun was born. Curated museum-grade artwork for your collection.

    Imagine a star being born.

    Not the gentle, silent process you might picture. Imagine something violent, chaotic, beautiful—a newborn sun ejecting jets of material at 100+ kilometers per second, slamming into surrounding clouds of dust and gas with the force of a cosmic hammer.

    That collision creates something extraordinary: a glowing arc of shock-heated material that tells the story of stellar birth itself.

    This is Herbig-Hara 49/50.

    The Science of Creation

    When a star is being born, it doesn't arrive quietly. A protostar—a young stellar embryo buried in a cloud of cosmic dust—pulls in material from its surroundings through gravity. But it can't absorb everything. Some of the infalling gas is ejected outward in narrow, powerful jets, one blasting above and below the star's equator.

    These jets travel at extreme speeds: 60 to 190 miles per second.

    When they slam into the slower-moving dust and gas around them—like a speedboat hitting water—they create shock waves. The material compresses, heats up to thousands of degrees, and then cools by emitting light at infrared wavelengths.

    What you're seeing in this image: that moment of collision. That moment when a star's birth throes reshape the interstellar medium itself.

    James Webb's infrared eyes reveal what Spitzer only hinted at: the glowing lines of molecular hydrogen and carbon monoxide tracing the shape of the jets, the delicate arcs marking where shock waves ripple outward, the fine structures revealing how the protostar's jets pulse and evolve over time.

    And Then There's the Galaxy

    But this image offers more than the science of star formation.

    A chance alignment—pure cosmic luck—places a distant spiral galaxy directly behind the Herbig-Hara object's tip. Billions of light-years away. A face-on galaxy with older, blue-colored stars at its center and reddish spiral arms glowing with warm dust and newborn stars.

    This creates a stunning visual experience: near and far, young and old, violent and serene all in one frame.

    When Spitzer observed HH 49/50 in 2006, astronomers thought the fuzzy object at the outflow's tip might be connected to the protostar. Webb's superior resolution solved that mystery: it's a separate galaxy, photobombing one of star formation's most intimate moments.

    Why This Image Matters

    This is not a distant, abstract cosmic phenomenon.

    This is your origin story.

    Our Sun formed in conditions similar to the Chamaeleon I Cloud complex—the same environment where HH 49/50's protostar is being born right now. When you look at this image, you're seeing the violent, messy, beautiful process that created us.

    Some observers see triumph: the universe engineering new stars through jet propulsion and shock waves. The perfect mechanism for stellar birth, refined over billions of years.

    Others see raw power: the incomprehensible violence required to forge a star, a humbling reminder of the cosmos's immense energies.

    Both reactions are right.

    Great cosmic art holds both truths at once. It's scientific. It's emotional. It's a window into something we can observe but never truly touch.

    Who This Print Speaks To

    For Space & Science Lovers

    This image illustrates star formation physics. If you follow astronomy, if you understand how our Sun was born, this is the portrait of that process. Protostellar jets. Shock-wave mechanics. The visible traces of invisible forces. This is pure stellar science made visible.

    For Art Collectors

    The composition is striking: a dynamic central focal point (the protostar and its jets) rendered in warm reddish-orange tones, complex arc structures suggesting motion and power, a delicate spiral galaxy at the tip offering visual depth, and a rich field of distant stars and galaxies creating texture and scale. The contrast and flow draw the eye. This is fine art masquerading as astronomy.

    For Educators & Students

    If you're teaching star formation, stellar mechanics, or observational astronomy, this image is a teaching masterpiece. It shows the invisible made visible. It provokes questions: Why these shapes? Why the arcs? Where is the star? What are we actually seeing? Every answer deepens understanding.

    For People Furnishing Original Spaces

    This print works in modern offices, creative studios, observatories, science centers, and homes where curiosity is honored. It's dynamic without being chaotic. It's complex without being busy. It adds intellectual depth and visual interest to any wall it occupies.

    For Dreamers & Seekers

    You know the feeling when you stare at the night sky and feel something shift inside? This image captures that. It's a reminder that the universe is vast, that creation is ongoing, that we're small but we're made of stardust born from processes just like this one. It belongs in spaces dedicated to wonder.

    Astrography Quality: From NASA Observatory to Gallery-Ready Presentation

    Astrography sources the universe's greatest moments and transforms them into heirloom prints.

    We don't start with generic space images. We hunt for the rare frames that combine:

    • Scientific significance – images that teach, reveal, or represent breakthroughs in human understanding.
    • Artistic composition – frames that work as visual art, not just as documentation.
    • Emotional resonance – photographs that make people feel something when they look at them.

    Then we prepare them in two formats:

    • Fine Art Edition (matte finish): Museum- and gallery-grade print on archival paper with archival inks, designed to last 200+ years under proper conditions. For collectors. For permanence. For spaces where art matters.
    • Poster Edition (semi-gloss finish): High-quality printing at an accessible price point. For space lovers, students, and anyone who wants the story and beauty of HH 49/50 without the premium investment.

    Every print is produced with obsessive attention to color accuracy, contrast, and detail. What arrives at your door feels like it belongs in an observatory or gallery, not a warehouse.

    Looking for authentic James Webb Space Telescope wall art that teaches and inspires?

    This Herbig-Hara 49/50 print brings the process of star formation into your home—a high-resolution image of a young protostar ejecting jets at extreme speeds, captured by humanity's most powerful space observatory.

    Perfect for:

    • Science enthusiasts who want to understand how stars are born.
    • Astronomy students and educators exploring stellar mechanics and observational techniques.
    • Creative professionals who surround themselves with images that spark curiosity.
    • Fine-art collectors seeking museum-quality space photography with scientific depth.
    • Anyone who looks up and wonders what's really happening out there.

    The jets that created this image are still moving. The protostar is still forming. And now you can witness it every single day.

    Witness a star being born.

    Choose your size. Select Fine Art or poster. Bring one of nature's most violent, beautiful processes into your space.

    Credit:
    NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI

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    Poznaj Jesiona

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