Mercury,
July/August 2002 Table of Contents
|
Courtesy
of Bruce Balick, et al., and NASA.
|
by
Sun Kwok
To
some, planetary nebulae are the source of pretty pictures. But to
the astronomers who study these stellar shrouds, planetary nebulae
offer a treasure trove of fascination and mystery.
From
a 10-year-old kid looking through his backyard telescope to scientists
at the Space Telescope Science Institute using the Hubble Space
Telescope, planetary nebulae have been the favorite observing targets
of many astronomers. Although we are all fascinated by the magnificent
shapes and wonderful colors of planetary nebulae, the journey to
understand their origin and inner workings has been a long and difficult
one.
The
journey began with William Herschels unfortunate naming of
these objects as "planetary nebulae" for their superficial
resemblance to Uranus. Astronomers later associated planetary nebulae
with their hot central stars, leading to the erroneous assumption
that they are young, because young stars are often hot. In the late
19th century, astronomers found that planetary nebulae spectra are
dominated by a pair of bright green lines of unknown origin. This
led to the suggestion that these were due to an unearthly element
called "nebulium" (see "Lighting
the Nebulae," page 17). Astronomers abandoned this idea
in the 1920s when the development of quantum physics led to the
realization that these lines are due to ionized oxygen atoms radiating
in near-vacuum conditions.
This
identification helped spark a new discipline called "astrophysics,"
which involves the application of the knowledge of atomic and nuclear
physics to the understanding of celestial phenomena. With these
new forms of knowledge at their disposal, astronomers in the 1950s
were able to interpret the optical spectra of planetary nebulae,
and to derive their temperature and density conditions. These findings
led Soviet astronomer Iosef Shklovskii to propose in 1956 that planetary
nebulae represent a phase of stellar evolution that old, evolved
stars pass through.
|