This view provides an illustration of what our Solar System (Sun and planets) may have looked like when it formed inside a dusty molecular cloud 4.6 billion years ago.
Our Sun did not form in isolation; rather, it was embedded inside a mosh pit of frantic stellar birth that was maybe even more massive and energetic than NGC 1333.
After 33 years, Hubble still continues to provide awe-inspiring views of the cosmos. Here are some of Hubble's achievements during his 33rd year in orbit --->
Hubble noticed Saturn's rings acting strangely. Strange spokes appear across Saturn's rings during Saturn's autumnal and vernal equinoxes.
Hubble found young stars spiraling into the center of a huge, oddly shaped stellar nursery called NGC 346 providing insight into a possible baby boom of star birth in the early universe.
Additionally, it found 3 supermassive black holes orbiting each other, throwing one out of its galaxy. This ejected black hole plowed through dust and gas kick-starting new star formation as it drifted away.
After 33 years, Hubble keeps expanding our knowledge of the cosmos and awe of its workings.