 Here we are zooming into an image of the giant Corayna nebula, 7,600 light-years away, taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. The nebula itself measures some 260 light-years across. That's about seven times the size of the Orion nebula. Here's Hubble's view of NGC 3324, called the Cosmic Cliffs, located at the northwest corner of the Corayna nebula. As we transition this to the web near-infrared image, we begin to see hundreds of previously hidden stars. The smallest of these are small, distant, and faint points of light. The largest appear closer, brighter, and more fully resolved, with eight-point diffraction spikes. And even some background galaxies can be seen. The steam that appears to rise from the cloudscape is actually hot ionized gas and hot dust streaming away from the nebula due to intense ultraviolet radiation. The orange-ish cloudy formation in the bottom half varies intensity and ranges from translucent to opaque. Dramatic pillars rise above the glowing wall of gas, and cavities are being created on the bottom and left by the intense radiation of stellar winds from new stars. Here we are scanning across a broader view of the cloud with a near-infrared combined with the mid-infrared view.