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Hubble
Reveals Details of a Newly Born
Planetary Nebula |
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| Name:
Stingray nebula, Hen-1357 Description: Planetary nebula Position: R.A.17h 16m 21s Dec. -59º 29m 23s Constellation: Ara Image credit: Matt Bobrowsky (Orbital Sciences Corporation) and NASA Distance: 18,000 light years Exposure Date: March 1996 Filters: F658N ([N II]), F502N ([O III]), and F487N (H-beta) Release Date: April 1, 1998 |
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| ABOUT
THIS IMAGE:
This Wide Field and
Planetary Camera 2 image captures the infancy of the Stingray nebula (Hen-1357),
the youngest known The image also shows
a ring of gas (green) surrounding the central star, with bubbles of gas
to the lower left and upper right of the The red curved lines
represent bright gas that is heated by a "shock" caused when
the central star's wind hits the walls of the The colors shown are
actual colors emitted by nitrogen (red), oxygen (green), and hydrogen
(blue). Astronomers have caught
a peek at a rare moment in the final stages of a star's life: a ballooning
shroud of gas cast off by a dying The Stingray nebula
(Hen-1357) is so named because its shape resembles a stingray fish. Images
of a planetary nebula in its A planetary nebula
forms after an aging, low-mass star swells to become a "red giant"
and blows off some of its outer layers of The central star in
the Stingray nebula has heated up quite fast. "Such a fast evolution
of the object actually came as a surprise," Adds Matt Bobrowsky
of Orbital Sciences Corp. in Greenbelt, Md.: "The Stingray nebula
is, in human terms, just an infant because The nebula is one-tenth
the size of most planetary nebulae and is 18,000 light-years away in the
direction of the southern The creation of twin
bubbles of gas, which shape so many planetary nebulae, has always been
a mystery to astronomers. The jets "Both theory
and observations have indicated that a ring or disk of matter plays a
role in forming the opposing outflows," Bobrowsky The images that Bobrowsky
and collaborators acquired show a ring of gas surrounding the central
star, with bubbles of gas above A further discovery
is a second star within the nebula, indicating that the Stingray's central
star is part of a binary star system. There is also evidence
that some of the gas in the nebula may be distorted due to the gravity
from the companion star - another Bobrowsky first observed
the Stingray nebula with the Hubble telescope in 1993. Those images were
the first to show the structure Donna Weaver Matt Bobrowsky
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