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Hubble reveals previously unseen shocks

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This new, detailed, Hubble image shows a planetary nebula in the making of a proto-planetary nebula. A dying star (hidden behind dust and gas in the centre of the nebula) has ejected massive amounts of gas. Parts of the gas have reached tremendous velocities of up to one-and-a-half million kilometres per hour. Shown in blue is light from hydrogen and ionised nitrogen arising from supersonic shocks where the gas stream rams into the surrounding material. The image shows for the first time these complex gas structures which are predicted by theory. The Hubble image was taken shortly before Christmas 2000 with the WFPC2 instrument (Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2) in four different filters. Here, light from 791 nm is displayed in red (exposure time 900 s), 675 nm in green (900 s), while combined light from hydrogen (656 nm) and ionised nitrogen atoms (658 nm) are shown as blue (14, 700 s).

Credit: ESA & Valentin Bujarrabal (Observatorio Astronomico Nacional, Spain)

 

Info

Related News
Id:heic0111a
Object:Calabash Nebula, Rotten Egg Nebula, IRAS 07399-1435
Type:Nebula
Instru-ment:WFPC2
Width:843
Height:794

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