A new image from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) shows what looks like a glowing jellyfish floating at the bottom of a dark, speckled sea. In reality, this critter belongs to the cosmos ò?? it's a dying star surrounded by fluorescing gas and two unusual rings.
"I am reminded of the jellyfish exhibition at the Monterey Bay Aquarium ò?? beautiful things floating in water, except this one is in space," said Edward Wright from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
The object, known as NGC 1514 and sometimes the "Crystal Ball" nebula, belongs to a class of planetary nebulae that form when dying stars toss off their outer layers of material. Ultraviolet light from a central star, or in this case a pair of stars, causes the gas to fluoresce with colorful light. The result is often beautiful ò?? these objects have been referred to as the butterflies of space.
Sir William Herschel ò?? who noted that its ò??shining fluidò?? meant that it could not be a faint cluster of stars, as originally suspected ò?? discovered NGC 1514 in 1790. Herschel had previously coined the term planetary nebulae to describe similar objects with circular, planet-like shapes.
Planetary nebulae with asymmetrical wings of nebulosity are common. But nothing like the newfound rings around NGC 1514 had been seen before. Astronomers say the rings are made of dust ejected by the dying pair of stars at the center of NGC 1514. This burst of dust collided with the walls of a cavity that was already cleared out by stellar winds, forming the rings.
"I just happened to look up one of my favorite objects in our WISE catalog and was shocked to see these odd rings," said Michael Ressler, a member of the WISE science team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Ressler first became acquainted with the object years ago while playing around with his amateur telescope on a desert camping trip. "It's funny how things come around full circle like this."
WISE was able to spot the rings for the first time because their dust is being heated and glows with the infrared light that WISE can detect. In visible-light images, the rings are hidden from view, overwhelmed by the brightly fluorescing clouds of gas.
"This object has been studied for more than 200 years, but WISE shows us it still has surprises," said Ressler.
Infrared light has been color-coded in the new WISE picture: blue represents light with a wavelength of 3.4 microns; turquoise is 4.6-micron light; green is 12-micron light; and red is 22-micron light. The dust rings stand out in orange. The greenish glow at the center is an inner shell of material blown out more recently than an outer shell that is too faint to be seen in WISE's infrared view. The white dot in the middle is the central pair of stars, which are too close together for WISE to see separately.
Ressler says NGC 1514's structure, though it looks unique, is probably similar in overall geometry to other hourglass nebulae, such as the Engraved Hourglass Nebula. The structure looks different in WISE's view because the rings are detectable only by their heat; they do not fluoresce at visible wavelengths, as do the rings in the other objects.
Serendipitous findings like this one are common in survey missions like WISE, which comb through the entire sky. WISE has been surveying the sky in infrared light since January 2010, cataloging hundreds of millions of asteroids, stars, and galaxies. In late September, after covering the sky about one-and-a-half times, it ran out of the frozen coolant needed to chill its longest- wavelength detectors. The mission, now called NEOWISE, is still scanning the skies with two of its infrared detectors. NEOWISE focuses primarily on comets and asteroids, including near-Earth objects, which are bodies whose orbits pass relatively close to Earth's orbit around the Sun.
The WISE science team says that more oddballs like NGC 1514 are sure to turn up in the plethora of WISE data ò?? the first batch of which will be released to the astronomical community in spring 2011.
A new image from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) shows what looks like a glowing jellyfish floating at the bottom of a dark, speckled sea. In reality, this critter belongs to the cosmos ò?? it's a dying star surrounded by fluorescing gas and two unusual rings.
"I am reminded of the jellyfish exhibition at the Monterey Bay Aquarium ò?? beautiful things floating in water, except this one is in space," said Edward Wright from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
The object, known as NGC 1514 and sometimes the "Crystal Ball" nebula, belongs to a class of planetary nebulae that form when dying stars toss off their outer layers of material. Ultraviolet light from a central star, or in this case a pair of stars, causes the gas to fluoresce with colorful light. The result is often beautiful ò?? these objects have been referred to as the butterflies of space.
Sir William Herschel ò?? who noted that its ò??shining fluidò?? meant that it could not be a faint cluster of stars, as originally suspected ò?? discovered NGC 1514 in 1790. Herschel had previously coined the term planetary nebulae to describe similar objects with circular, planet-like shapes.
Planetary nebulae with asymmetrical wings of nebulosity are common. But nothing like the newfound rings around NGC 1514 had been seen before. Astronomers say the rings are made of dust ejected by the dying pair of stars at the center of NGC 1514. This burst of dust collided with the walls of a cavity that was already cleared out by stellar winds, forming the rings.
"I just happened to look up one of my favorite objects in our WISE catalog and was shocked to see these odd rings," said Michael Ressler, a member of the WISE science team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Ressler first became acquainted with the object years ago while playing around with his amateur telescope on a desert camping trip. "It's funny how things come around full circle like this."
WISE was able to spot the rings for the first time because their dust is being heated and glows with the infrared light that WISE can detect. In visible-light images, the rings are hidden from view, overwhelmed by the brightly fluorescing clouds of gas.
"This object has been studied for more than 200 years, but WISE shows us it still has surprises," said Ressler.
Infrared light has been color-coded in the new WISE picture: blue represents light with a wavelength of 3.4 microns; turquoise is 4.6-micron light; green is 12-micron light; and red is 22-micron light. The dust rings stand out in orange. The greenish glow at the center is an inner shell of material blown out more recently than an outer shell that is too faint to be seen in WISE's infrared view. The white dot in the middle is the central pair of stars, which are too close together for WISE to see separately.
Ressler says NGC 1514's structure, though it looks unique, is probably similar in overall geometry to other hourglass nebulae, such as the Engraved Hourglass Nebula. The structure looks different in WISE's view because the rings are detectable only by their heat; they do not fluoresce at visible wavelengths, as do the rings in the other objects.
Serendipitous findings like this one are common in survey missions like WISE, which comb through the entire sky. WISE has been surveying the sky in infrared light since January 2010, cataloging hundreds of millions of asteroids, stars, and galaxies. In late September, after covering the sky about one-and-a-half times, it ran out of the frozen coolant needed to chill its longest- wavelength detectors. The mission, now called NEOWISE, is still scanning the skies with two of its infrared detectors. NEOWISE focuses primarily on comets and asteroids, including near-Earth objects, which are bodies whose orbits pass relatively close to Earth's orbit around the Sun.
The WISE science team says that more oddballs like NGC 1514 are sure to turn up in the plethora of WISE data ò?? the first batch of which will be released to the astronomical community in spring 2011.