The gates of heaven? Hubble telescope captures extremely rare picture of dying star emitting ethereal beams of light
By Ruth Whitehead|
It looks like the gateway to heaven - but this stunning image taken by the Hubble Telescope has captured the dramatic phase of a dying star's lifespan when it runs out of nuclear fuel and emits beams of light like searchlights.
Swansong in light: this Hubble image of the Egg
Nebula shows one of the best views to date of the brief but dramatic
phase in a star's life when it runs out of nuclear fuel
NASA and the European Space Agency, who run the telescope, explained that over a few thousand years the hot remains of the aging star in the centre of the nebula, or cloud of dust, heat it up, 'excite' the gas, and make it glow.
At the centre of the image, hidden in the thick dust cloud, is the nebula’s central star. Four beams of light shine out from it through the nebula like searchlights. It is thought that ring-shaped holes in the thick cocoon of dust, carved by jets coming from the star, let the beams of light emerge through the otherwise opaque cloud. They said the cloud had an 'onion-like' layered structure which is caused by bursts of material being ejected from the dying star every few hundred years.
Starry, starry night: this Hubble image released
on Tuesday shows a young group of stars in a dwarf satellite galaxy of
the Milky Way
The agencies add that because the
preplanetary nebulae have a short lifespan, there are relatively few of
them in existence at any one time. Moreover, they are very faint, and
need powerful telescopes to be
seen, which is why they have only been discovered comparatively
recently.
Astronomers
cannot tell exactly how big the Egg Nebula is because they only know its distance to earth
very approximately. It may be
larger and further away, or smaller but nearer. It is estimated to be
around 3,000 light-years from earth. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2136594/Is-heaven-looks-like-Hubble-telescope-captures-mysterious-phase-dying-stars-life.html#ixzz1tN0jIh6G
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