| ABOUT
THIS IMAGE:
Astronomers may not have observed the fabled "Stairway to Heaven,"
but they have photographed something almost as intriguing: ladder-like
structures surrounding a dying star.
A new image, taken with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, reveals startling
new details of one of the most unusual nebulae known in our Milky Way.
Cataloged as HD 44179, this nebula is more commonly called the "Red
Rectangle" because of its unique shape and color as seen with ground-based
telescopes.
Hubble has revealed a wealth of new features in the Red Rectangle that
cannot be seen with ground-based telescopes looking through the Earth's
turbulent atmosphere. Details of the Hubble study were published in the
April 2004 issue of The Astronomical Journal.
Hubble's sharp pictures show that the Red Rectangle is not really rectangular,
but has an overall X-shaped structure, which the astronomers involved
in the study interpret as arising from outflows of gas and dust from the
star in the center. The outflows are ejected from the star in two opposing
directions, producing a shape like two ice-cream cones touching at their
tips. Also remarkable are straight features that appear like rungs on
a ladder, making the Red Rectangle look similar to a spider web, a shape
unlike that of any other known nebula in the sky. These rungs may have
arisen in episodes of mass ejection from the star occurring every few
hundred years. They could represent a series of nested, expanding structures
similar in shape to wine glasses, seen exactly edge-on so that their rims
appear as straight lines from our vantage point.
The star in the center of the Red Rectangle is one that began its life
as a star similar to our Sun. It is now nearing the end of its lifetime,
and is in the process of ejecting its outer layers to produce the visible
nebula. The shedding of the outer layers began about 14,000 years ago.
In a few thousand years, the star will have become smaller and hotter,
and will begin to release a flood of ultraviolet light into the surrounding
nebula; at that time, gas in the nebula will begin to fluoresce, producing
what astronomers call a planetary nebula.
At the present time, however, the star is still so cool that atoms in
the surrounding gas do not glow, and the surrounding dust particles can
only be seen because they are reflecting the starlight from the central
star. In addition, there are molecules mixed in with the dust, which emit
light in the red portion of the spectrum. Astronomers are not yet certain
which types of molecules are producing the red color that is so striking
in the Red Rectangle, but suspect that they are hydrocarbons that form
in the cool outflow from the central star.
Another remarkable feature of the Red Rectangle, visible only with the
superb resolution of the Hubble telescope, is the dark band passing across
the central star. This dark band is the shadow of a dense disk of dust
that surrounds the star. In fact, the star itself cannot be seen directly,
due to the thickness of the dust disk. All we can see is light that streams
out perpendicularly to the disk, and then scatters off of dust particles
toward our direction. Astronomers found that the star in the center is
actually a close pair of stars that orbit each other with a period of
about 10 1/2 months. Interactions between these stars have probably caused
the ejection of the thick dust disk that obscures our view of the binary.
The disk has funneled subsequent outflows in the directions perpendicular
to the disk, forming the bizarre bi- conical structure we see as the Red
Rectangle. The reasons for the periodic ejections of more gas and dust,
which are producing the "rungs" revealed in the Hubble image,
remain unknown.
The Red Rectangle
was first discovered during a rocket flight in the early 1970s, in which
astronomers were searching for strong sources of infrared radiation. This
infrared source lies about 2,300 light-years from Earth in the direction
of the constellation Monoceros. Stars surrounded by clouds of dust are
often strong infrared sources because the dust is heated by the starlight
and radiates long-wavelength light. Studies of HD 44179 with ground-based
telescopes revealed a rectangular shape in the dust surrounding the star
in the center, leading to the name Red Rectangle which was coined in 1973
by astronomers Martin Cohen and Mike Merrill.
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