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What Did Hubble See on Your Birthday?

Mentalist

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Staff member


october-16-2019-ring-nebula.jpg

On October 16 in 1998
Ring Nebula
About a light-year across, the Ring Nebula is formed by a dying star floating in a blue haze of hot gas at its center. This image reveals elongated, dark clumps of material embedded in the gas at the edge of the nebula.

The NASA Hubble Space Telescope has captured the sharpest view yet of the most famous of all planetary nebulae: the Ring Nebula (M57). In this October 1998 image, the telescope has looked down a barrel of gas cast off by a dying star thousands of years ago. This photo reveals elongated dark clumps of material embedded in the gas at the edge of the nebula; the dying central star floating in a blue haze of hot gas. The nebula is about a light-year in diameter and is located some 2,000 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellation Lyra.

The colors are approximately true colors. The color image was assembled from three black-and-white photos taken through different color filters with the Hubble telescope's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2. Blue isolates emission from very hot helium, which is located primarily close to the hot central star. Green represents ionized oxygen, which is located farther from the star. Red shows ionized nitrogen, which is radiated from the coolest gas, located farthest from the star. The gradations of color illustrate how the gas glows because it is bathed in ultraviolet radiation from the remnant central star, whose surface temperature is a white-hot 216,000 degrees Fahrenheit (120,000 degrees Celsius).
 
On May 4 in 2002

Cat's Eye Nebula

Produced by a dying star, the Cat's Eye Nebula is one of the most complex planetary nebulas known. This image reveals a pattern of concentric rings around the central star. Each "ring" is actually the edge of a spherical bubble of material ejected by the star.


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I wish I actually was born in 2002.
 
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