|
These gigantic, tadpole-shaped objects are probably the result of a dying star's last gasps. Dubbed "cometary
knots" because their glowing heads and
gossamer tails resemble comets, the gaseous objects probably were
formed during a star's final stages of life.
Hubble astronomer C. Robert O'Dell and graduate student Kerry P. Handron of Rice University in Houston,
Texas discovered thousands of these knots
with the Hubble Space Telescope while exploring the Helix nebula,
the closest planetary nebula to Earth at 450 light-years away in the constellation
Aquarius. Although ground-based
telescopes have revealed such objects, astronomers have never seen so many of them. The most visible knots
all lie along the
inner edge of the doomed star's ring, trillions of miles away from the star's nucleus. Although these
gaseous knots appear small, they're actually huge.
Each gaseous head is at least twice the size of our solar system;
each tail stretches for 100 billion miles, about 1,000 times the distance between the Earth
and the Sun. Astronomers
theorize that the doomed star spews hot, lower-density gas from its surface, which collides with cooler, higher-density
gas
that had been ejected 10,000 years before. The crash fragments the smooth cloud surrounding the star
into smaller, denser finger-like droplets, like
dripping paint.
This image was taken in August, 1994 with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2. The red light depicts
nitrogen emission ([NII] 6584A); green,
hydrogen (H-alpha, 6563A); and blue, oxygen (5007A).
Credit: Robert O'Dell, Kerry P. Handron (Rice University, Houston, Texas) and NASA
|