In a stunning new image, NASA's James Webb Telescope captures the iconic "Pillars of Creation."

 The classic "Pillars of Creation" have been captured by NASA's powerful James Webb Telescope in a lush, extremely realistic setting. Three towers can be seen in the distance, sometimes seeming semi-transparent in near-infrared light. They are comprised of interstellar dust and gas. The image shows how much interstellar dust surrounds these pillars and how thick it is.

The famous creation is located in the enormous Eagle Nebula, 6,500 light-years away. The Pillars of Creation were initially recorded by NASA's Hubble Telescope in 1995, and it was done so again in 2014.

According to a NASA press release, the scene-stealers in this photograph are newly created stars. In the pillars of gas and dust, knots with sufficient mass start to collapse under their own gravity, slowly heat up, and finally create new stars.

According to NASA, the wavy lines that appear to be lava at the rims of some pillars are caused by "These are star-forming stellar ejections from the surrounding gas and dust. Periodically, young stars emit supersonic jets that slam into dense pillar-like clouds of matter. In some cases, this also leads to bow shocks, which can create waves that resemble the motion of a boat through the sea."

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NASA previously uploaded a photo of the Bubble Nebula, a cosmic bubble wrap. The Hubble Space Telescope of NASA took the picture. The cosmic bubble wrap is located in the constellation Cassiopeia, 7,100 light-years from Earth. One of the most well-known star bubbles is the Bubble Nebula.

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