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The Glowing Eye of NGC 6751
Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have
obtained images of the strikingly unusual planetary nebula, NGC
6751. Glowing in the constellation Aquila like a giant eye, the
nebula is a cloud of gas ejected several thousand years ago from
the hot star visible in its center.
"Planetary nebulae" are named after their round shapes
as seen visually in small telescopes, and have nothing else to do
with planets. They are shells of gas thrown off by stars of masses
similar to that of our own Sun, when the stars are nearing the ends
of their lives. The loss of the outer layers of the star into space
exposes the hot stellar core, whose strong ultraviolet radiation
then causes the ejected gas to fluoresce as the planetary nebula.
Our own Sun is predicted to eject its planetary nebula some 6 billion
years from now.
The Hubble observations were obtained in 1998 with
the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) by a team of astronomers
led by Arsen Hajian of the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington,
DC. The Hubble Heritage team, working at the Space Telescope Science
Institute in Baltimore, has prepared this color rendition by combining
the Hajian team's WFPC2 images taken through three different color
filters that isolate nebular gases of different temperatures.
The nebula shows several remarkable and poorly understood
features. Blue regions mark the hottest glowing gas, which forms
a roughly circular ring around the central stellar remnant. Orange
and red show the locations of cooler gas. The cool gas tends to
lie in long streamers pointing away from the central star, and in
a surrounding, tattered-looking ring at the outer edge of the nebula.
The origin of these cooler clouds within the nebula is still uncertain,
but the streamers are clear evidence that their shapes are affected
by radiation and stellar winds from the hot star at the center.
The star's surface temperature is estimated at a scorching 140,000
degrees Celsius (250,000 degrees Fahrenheit).
Hajian and his team are scheduled to reobserve NGC
6751 with Hubble's WFPC2 in 2001. Due to the expansion of the nebula,
at a speed of about 40 kilometers per second (25 miles per second),
the high resolution of Hubble's camera will reveal the slight increase
in the size of the nebula since 1998. This measurement will allow
the astronomers to calculate an accurate distance to NGC 6751. In
the meantime, current estimates are that NGC 6751 is roughly 6,500
light-years from Earth. The nebula's diameter is 0.8 light-years,
some 600 times the diameter of our own solar system.
Credit: NASA,
The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
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