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The Pistol
Nebula, one of the intrinsically brightest
stars in our galaxy, appears as the bright
white dot in the center of this image taken
with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. Hubble's
Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object
Spectrometer (NICMOS) was needed to take the
picture, because the star is hidden at the
galactic center, behind obscuring dust.
NICMOS' infrared vision penetrated the dust
to reveal the star, which is glowing with
the radiance of 10 million suns.
The image also shows one of the most massive
stellar eruptions ever seen in space. The
radiant star has enough raw power to blow
off two expanding shells (magenta) of gas
equal to the mass of several of our suns.
The largest shell is so big (4 light-years)
it would stretch nearly all the way from our
sun to the next nearest star. The outbursts
seen by Hubble are estimated to be only
4,000 and 6,000 years old, respectively.
Despite such a tremendous mass loss,
astronomers estimate the extraordinary star
presently may be 100 times more massive than
our Sun, and may have started with as much
as 200 solar masses of material, but it is
violently shedding much of its mass.
The star is 25,000 light-years away in the
direction of the constellation Sagittarius.
Despite its great distance, the star would
be visible to the naked eye as a modest 4th
magnitude object if it were not for the dust
between it and the Earth. This false-color
image is a composite of two separately
filtered images taken with the NICMOS on
Sept. 13, 1997. The field of view is 4.8
light-years across.
Image credit: NASA and Don F. Figer
(UCLA)
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In January 2002, a dull star in an
obscure constellation suddenly became
600,000 times more luminous than our sun,
temporarily making it the brightest star in
our Milky Way galaxy. The mysterious star
has long since faded back to obscurity, but
observations by NASA's Hubble Space
Telescope of a phenomenon called a "light
echo" have uncovered remarkable new
features. These details promise to provide
astronomers with a CAT-scan-like probe of
the three-dimensional structure of shells of
dust surrounding an aging star.
Image Credit: NASA, ESA and H.E. Bond (STScI)
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Resembling an
aerial fireworks
explosion, this
dramatic image
of the energetic
star WR124,
taken by the
Hubble Space
Telescope,
reveals that it
is surrounded by
hot clumps of
gas being
ejected into
space at speeds
of over 100,000
miles per hour.
Also remarkable
are vast arcs of
glowing gas
around the star,
which are
resolved into
filamentary,
chaotic
substructures,
yet with no
overall global
shell structure.
Though the
existence of
clumps in the
winds of hot
stars has been
deduced through
spectroscopic
observations of
their inner
winds, Hubble
resolves them
directly in the
nebula M1-67
around WR124 as
100 billion-mile
wide glowing gas
blobs. Each blob
is about 30
times the mass
of the Earth.
The massive, hot
central star is
known as a Wolf-Rayet
star. This
extremely rare
and short-lived
class of
super-hot star
is going through
a violent,
transitional
phase
characterized by
the fierce
ejection of
mass. The blobs
may result from
the furious
stellar wind
that is unstable
as it flows into
space. As the
blobs cool, they
eventually will
dissipate into
space and so
don't pose any
threat to
neighboring
stars.
The star is
15,000
light-years
away, located in
the
constellation
Sagittarius. The
picture was
taken with
Hubble's Wide
Field Planetary
Camera 2 in
March 1997. The
image is
false-colored to
reveal details
in the nebula's
structure.
Image credit:
NASA/Yves
Grosdidier
(University of
Montreal and
Observatoire de
Strasbourg),
Anthony Moffat (Universitie
de Montreal),
Gilles Joncas (Universite
Laval), Agnes
Acker (Observatoire
de Strasbourg)
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Hinode, a collaborative mission of the space agencies of Japan, the United States, United Kingdom and Europe, captured these very dynamic pictures of our sun's chromosphere on Jan. 12, 2007. Taken by Hinode's Solar Optical Telescope, this image of the sun reveals the filamentary nature of the plasma connecting regions of different magnetic polarity. The chromosphere is a thin layer of solar atmosphere sandwiched between the visible surface, photosphere and corona.
Image credit: JAXA/NASA
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Thursday March 17, 2011

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