Wednesday, April 18, 2007

The Red Square Nebula

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From this site.
What could cause a nebula to appear square? No one is quite sure. The hot star system known as MWC 922, however, appears to be imbedded in a nebula with just such a shape. The above image combines infrared exposures from the Hale Telescope on Mt. Palomar in California, and the Keck-2 Telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii. A leading progenitor hypothesis for the square nebula is that the central star or stars somehow expelled cones of gas during a late developmental stage. For MWC 922, these cones happen to incorporate nearly right angles and be visible from the sides. Supporting evidence for the cone hypothesis includes radial spokes in the image that might run along the cone walls. Researchers speculate that the cones viewed from another angle would appear similar to the gigantic rings of supernova 1987A, possibly indicating that a star in MWC 922 might one day itself explode in a similar supernova.
All I know is that it is beautiful and glorious.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

It is a wonderous thing.

This is why I want them to spend the money and fix the Hubble. The scientists get their data, and the rest of us get beautiful, awesome pictures.

ellroon said...

Exactly. If you want to feel real awe, look to the stars.

Sorghum Crow said...

Red Square? It's got to me be a commie-pinko plot.

ellroon said...

OMG!! The commies got there first!!