🌌 SpacePicture of a Day: Shapley 1: An Annular Planetary Nebula 🪐

avatar

Shapley 1: An Annular Planetary Nebula


What’s looking back at you isn’t a cosmic eye, but Shapley 1, a beautifully symmetric planetary nebula. Shapley 1, also known as the Fine Ring Nebula or PLN 329+2.1, bejewels the southern sky constellation of the Carpenter's Square (Norma). The nebula is the result of a star near the mass of our Sun running out of fuel and shedding its outer layers. Glowing oxygen from those expelled layers makes up the circular halo. The bright central point is actually a binary: a white dwarf, the remaining stellar core after the outer layers are expelled into space, and another star, orbiting each other every 2.9 days. Shapley 1’s annular shape is due to our top-down view of the system and provides insight into the influence of central stars on planetary nebula structures.


HD image: LINK 🛸

Copyright: Peter Bresseler;
Text:
Keighley Rockcliffe
(NASA
GSFC,
UMBC
CSST,
CRESST II)
🔭

Project Website: LINK 🚀



👨‍🚀 How many people are in space right now? 👩‍🚀

12

NameCraft
Oleg KononenkoISS
Nikolai ChubISS
Tracy Caldwell DysonISS
Matthew DominickISS
Michael BarrattISS
Jeanette EppsISS
Alexander GrebenkinISS
Butch WilmoreISS
Sunita WilliamsISS
Li GuangsuTiangong
Li CongTiangong
Ye GuangfuTiangong


0
0
0.000
0 comments