In 1995, astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope produced "The Pillars of Creation," an image of stars emerging from biblical-looking clouds of dust that has become an icon of the space age.
Now astronomers operating NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope have made
their own version. The new image, appropriately called "Mountains of
Creation," shows star-forming pillars in a region known as W5 in the
constellation Cassiopeia. These pillars, at heights up to 40
light-years, are 10 times as large as those in the famous Hubble image.

NASA
An infrared image of emerging stars
captured by the Spitzer Space Telescope.
The astronomers, led by Lori E. Allen of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, say the towering mountains of the new image probably represent the densest, most fecund remnants of a larger, cloud. It is being eroded by radiation and winds of particles from a ferociously bright star just out of the top of the picture.
Nestled within the dusty pillars are hundreds of embryonic stars. But Spitzer's detectors are designed to see infrared, or "heat," radiation right through the dust, allowing astronomers to study the cloaked stars, which Dr. Allen described as "offspring" of the big star.
"The Sun could have formed in such a cluster, since many stars form
in clusters," Dr. Allen said in an e-mail message, explaining that
pressure created by the star could compress gas in the cloud, bringing
about the formation of new stars.