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The Red Spider Nebula:
Surfing in Sagittarius - not for the faint-hearted!
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Name: NGC 6537, Red Spider Nebula
Description: Planetary Nebula
Position (J2000): RA 18h 05m 13.1s  Dec: -19° 50' 34.9?
Constellation: Sagittarius
Distance: 3000- 6000 light years
Apparent dimensions: 1.5 arcmin
Field of view: 2.18 x 1.21 arcminutes
Orientation: North is 50.1° left of vertical
Image Credit: ESA & Garrelt Mellema (Leiden University, the Netherlands)
Release Date: July 24, 2001



Other images:  N9738   N0109   N1338
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ABOUT THIS IMAGE:

Hubble observations have revealed huge waves sculpted in the Red Spider Nebula. This warm and windy planetary nebula harbors one of the hottest stars in the Universe and its powerful stellar winds generate waves 100 billion kilometers high - intimidating for even the bravest space surfers.

The Red Spider Nebula, NGC 6537, is a striking 'butterfly' or bipolar (two-lobed) planetary nebula. Planetary nebulae are the glowing embers of ordinary stars, such as our Sun. At the end of their lives these stars expel most of their material into space, often forming a two-lobed structure as in the case of the Red Spider. This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image shows that the gas walls of the two lobed structures are not at all smooth, but rather are rippled in a complex way. These waves are driven by stellar winds radiating from the hot central star, much as a wind passing over a lake can generate waves on the water.

For many years astronomers from Europe and the USA have successfully used Hubble to study the variety of forms and shapes of planetary nebulae. The intricate pattern of waves of the Red Spider is an excellent example of the level of detail revealed by Hubble's sharp eyes. Another example is the 'S'-shaped symmetry of the lobes in the image - the lobes opposite each other appear similar. This is believed to be due to the presence of a companion to the hot central star (none of which are visible in the image).

An ideal place for potential space surfers?

The waves reach peaks 100 billion kilometers high and must have been produced by a powerful wind blowing with a speed of 2000-4500 kilometers per second (about 7-16 million km/hr). The waves themselves move outwards at a slower rate of 300 km/s (about 1 million km/hr). To add to these challenging climatic conditions, this nebula is not only windy, but also hot. The temperature of the gas waves is a scorching 10,000 K - much too warm for human surfers! Detailed investigations of the Hubble image have shown that the central white dwarf, the remaining compact core of the original star, must have a temperature of at least half a million degrees, making it one of the hottest stars known. It is so hot that it is invisible to Hubble's eye and emits primarily in X-rays.

The waves are generated by supersonic shocks formed when the local gas is compressed and heated in front of the rapidly expanding lobes. Atoms caught in the shocks radiate the visible light seen in this image. The process appears to have been underway long enough to make the edges of the lobe walls look as if they have started to fracture into wave crests.

The Red Spider nebula is located about 3000 light-years away in the constellation of Sagittarius. The Hubble images were obtained on September 12, 1997 with the WPFC2 instrument (Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2) in five different filters. Here, light from sulphur ions is displayed in red (exposure time 900 s), nitrogen ions in orange (1200 s) and ionized hydrogen (H-alpha) in green (1240 s), while atomic oxygen is in light blue (1200 s) and ionized oxygen in dark blue (1000 s).