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HUBBLE FINDS SEARCHLIGHT BEAMS AND MULTIPLE
ARCS AROUND A DYING STAR
This image of the Egg Nebula, also known as CRL2688 and located
roughly 3,000 light-years from us, was taken in red light with the
Wide Field and
Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) aboard NASA's
Hubble Space Telescope. The image shows a pair of mysterious
"searchlight" beams emerging from a hidden star,
criss-crossed
by numerous bright arcs. This image sheds new light on the poorly
understood ejection of stellar matter which accompanies the slow
death of Sun-like
stars. The image is shown in false color. The central
star in CRL2688 was a red giant a few hundred years ago. The nebula
is really a large cloud of dust and gas
ejected by the star, expanding
at a speed of 20 km/s (115,000 mph). A dense cocoon of dust (the
dark band in the image center) enshrouds the star and hides it from
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km/s (115,000 mph). A dense cocoon of dust (the dark band in the image center) enshrouds the star and hides it from our view.
Starlight escapes more
easily in directions where the cocoon is thinner, and is reflected towards us by dust particles in the cloud,
giving it its overall appearance.
Objects like CRL2688 are rare because they are in an evolutionary phase which lasts for a very short time (~1,000 to 2,000
years). However, they may hold
the key to our understanding of how red giant stars transform themselves into planetary nebulae.
For the first time, we can see a 10,000 year-old history of
mass-ejection in a red giant star in such exquisite detail. The arcs in CRL2688
represent dense shells of matter within a smooth cloud, and show that the rate of mass
ejection from the central star has varied
on time scales of ~100 to 500 years throughout its mass-loss history. With Hubble we have detected matter in this nebula
to a
radius of 0.6 light-years -- much further out than has been possible before, giving a better estimate of the amount of matter in the
nebula. Other
unexpected results seen in this image are the very sharply defined edges of the beams and fine spoke-like features
which suggest that, contrary to previous
models, the searchlight beams are formed as a result of starlight escaping from ring-shaped
holes in the cocoon surrounding the star. The spoke- like features
result from shadows cast by blobs of material distributed within
the region of the ring-like holes. Such holes may be carved out by a wobbling, high-speed
stream of matter -- they will play a crucial
role in the shaping of the planetary nebula which will result from CRL2688.
Alternatively, the searchlight beams may result from starlight reflected off fine jet-like streams of matter being ejected from the
center, and
confined to the walls of a conical region around the symmetry axis. Such fine jets are not unprecedented: they have
recently been observed in Hubble images of a
planetary nebula (the Cat's Eye Nebula). Both the above scenarios require the
ejection of high-speed material in a narrow beam. The presence of such material in
CRL2688 has been inferred from other observations.
However, the mechanism for ejecting high-speed jets or for producing the cocoon are not understood. But it
seems likely that
if the central star in such objects has a faint companion star, the gravitational interaction between the two stars and/or the outflowing
matter from the red giant star may play an important role in the production of the cocoon and the jets.
When Sun-like stars get old, they become cooler and redder, increasing their sizes and energy output tremendously: they are
called red giants. Most of
the carbon (the basis of life) and particulate matter (crucial building blocks of solar systems like ours)
in the universe is manufactured and dispersed
by red giant stars. When the red giant star has ejected all of its outer layers, the ultraviolet
radiation from the exposed hot stellar core makes the
surrounding cloud of matter created during the red giant phase glow: the
object becomes a planetary nebula. A long-standing puzzle is how planetary nebulae
acquire their complex shapes and symmetries,
since red giants and the gas/dust clouds surrounding them are mostly round. Hubble's ability to see very fine
structural details
(usually blurred beyond recognition in ground-based images) enables us to look for clues to this puzzle.
Credit: Raghvendra Sahai and John Trauger (JPL), the WFPC2 science team, and NASA
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