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Starfish in the Sky
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IRAS 19024+0044 Description: Planetary Nebula Position J(2000): RA 19hr 05m 02.06s Dec +00° 48' 50.9" Constellation: Aquila Distance: 11000 light years Field of View: Approx. 9 x 9 arcseconds Image Credit: ESA/Hubble, NASA and R. Sahai Release date: September 5, 2011 |
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ABOUT THIS IMAGE: In the constellation of Aquila (the Eagle), lies a star nearing the end of its life that is surrounded by a starfish-shaped cloud of gas and dust. A striking image of this object, known as IRAS 19024+0044 has been captured by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Protoplanetary nebulae offer glimpses of how stars similar to the Sun end their lives and how they make the transition to white dwarfs surrounded by planetary nebulae. As it ages, a Sun-like star eventually sheds its outer layers into space, creating a beautiful and often intricately shaped cloud of gas and dust around it. At first, still relatively cool, the star is unable to ionize this gas, which shines only by reflected and scattered stellar light. Only when the temperature of the star increases enough to ionize this protoplanetary nebula does the pattern of gas and dust become a fully fledged planetary nebula. Protoplanetary nebulae are relatively rare and short-lived objects that provide astronomers with clues into how the often strangely asymmetric planetary nebulae are formed. Clearly visible in this image are five blue lobes that extend away from the central star and give the nebula its asymmetric starfish shape. While astronomers have come up with theories for the origin of these structures, such as direction-changing jets or explosive ejections of matter from the star, their formation is not entirely understood. IRAS 19024+0044 is blue in color as the blue component of the light coming from the star is more easily scattered by the gas and dust in the nebula, while the red and orange rays are relatively unaffected. This is similar to what happens to sunlight in the Earth's atmosphere, giving the sky its distinctive shade of blue. This
picture was created from images taken with the High Resolution Channel
of Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys. It is a composite image created
by the combination of exposures taken through a yellow-orange filter (F606W,
colored blue) and a near-infrared filter (F814W, colored red). The total
exposure times were 880 s and 140 s, respectively and the field of view
is approximately 9 by 9 arcseconds. |
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