I would look at this one hundred times a night when I was studying a star in the constellation Lyra, never looked like this in a scope.
The Ring Nebula's distinctive shape makes it a popular illustration for
astronomy books. But new observations by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope of the
glowing gas shroud around an old, dying, sun-like star reveal a new
twist.
"The nebula is not like a bagel, but rather, it's like a jelly
doughnut, because it's filled with material in the middle," said C. Robert
O'Dell of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. He leads a research team
that used Hubble and several ground-based telescopes to obtain the best view yet
of the iconic nebula. The images show a more complex structure than astronomers
once thought and have allowed them to construct the most precise 3-D model of
the nebula.
"With Hubble's detail, we see a completely different shape than what's been
thought about historically for this classic nebula," O'Dell said. "The new
Hubble observations show the nebula in much clearer detail, and we see things
are not as simple as we previously thought."
The Ring Nebula is about
2,000 light-years from Earth and measures roughly 1 light-year across. Located
in the constellation Lyra, the nebula is a popular target for amateur
astronomers.
Previous observations by several telescopes had detected the
gaseous material in the ring's central region. But the new view by Hubble's
sharp-eyed Wide Field Camera 3 shows the nebula's structure in more detail.
O'Dell's team suggests the ring wraps around a blue, football-shaped structure.
Each end of the structure protrudes out of opposite sides of the ring.
The nebula is tilted toward Earth so that astronomers see the ring
face-on. In the Hubble image, the blue structure is the glow of helium.
Radiation from the white dwarf star, the white dot in the center of the ring, is
exciting the helium to glow. The white dwarf is the stellar remnant of a
sun-like star that has exhausted its hydrogen fuel and has shed its outer layers
of gas to gravitationally collapse to a compact object.
O'Dell's team was surprised at the detailed Hubble views of the dark, irregular
knots of dense gas embedded along the inner rim of the ring, which look like
spokes in a bicycle wheel. These gaseous tentacles formed when expanding hot gas
pushed into cool gas ejected previously by the doomed star. The knots are more
resistant to erosion by the wave of ultraviolet light unleashed by the star. The
Hubble images have allowed the team to match up the knots with the spikes of
light around the bright, main ring, which are a shadow effect. Astronomers have
found similar knots in other planetary nebulae.
All of this gas was
expelled by the central star about 4,000 years ago. The original star was
several times more massive than our sun. After billions of years converting
hydrogen to helium in its core, the star began to run out of fuel. It then
ballooned in size, becoming a red giant. During this phase, the star shed its
outer gaseous layers into space and began to collapse as fusion reactions began
to die out. A gusher of ultraviolet light from the dying star energized the gas,
making it glow.
The outer rings were formed when faster-moving gas
slammed into slower-moving material. The nebula is expanding at more than 43,000
miles an hour, but the center is moving faster than the expansion of the main
ring. O'Dell's team measured the nebula's expansion by comparing the new Hubble
observations with Hubble studies made in 1998.
The Ring Nebula will
continue to expand for another 10,000 years, a short phase in the lifetime of
the star. The nebula will become fainter and fainter until it merges with the
interstellar medium.
Studying the Ring Nebula's fate will provide insight
into the sun's demise in another 6 billion years. The sun is less massive than
the Ring Nebula's progenitor star, so it will not have an opulent ending.
"When the sun becomes a white dwarf, it will heat more slowly after it
ejects its outer gaseous layers," O'Dell said. "The material will be farther
away once it becomes hot enough to illuminate the gas. This larger distance
means the sun's nebula will be fainter because it is more extended."
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