Hubble peers inside a celestial geode
![](https://cdn.sci.esa.int/documents/34247/35306/1567218072728-ACFDMAixa4n0.jpg)
Date: 13 August 2004
Satellite: Hubble
Depicts: N44F
Copyright: ESA/NASA, Yäel Nazé (University of Liège, Belgium) and You-Hua Chu (University of Illinois, Urbana, USA)
In this unusual image, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope captures a rare view of the celestial equivalent of a geode - a gas cavity carved by the stellar wind and intense ultraviolet radiation from a young hot star.
Real geodes are handball-sized, hollow rocks that start out as bubbles in volcanic or sedimentary rock. Only when these inconspicuous round rocks are split in half by a geologist, do we get a chance to appreciate the inside of the rock cavity that is lined with crystals. In the case of Hubble's 35 light-year diameter 'celestial geode' the transparency of its bubble-like cavity of interstellar gas and dust reveals the treasures of its interior.
Last Update: 1 September 2019