Planetary nebulae are the spectacular final display at the end of a giant star’s life. Once a red giant
star has exhausted its available fuel and shed its last layers of gas,
its compact core will contract further, enabling a final burst of
nuclear fusion. The exposed core reaches extremely hot temperatures,
radiating very energetic ultraviolet light that energises the enormous
clouds of cast-off gas. Molecules in the gas are ionised and glow
brightly; here, red and orange indicate nitrogen molecules, green is
hydrogen and blue shows oxygen in the nebula. Kohoutek 4-55 has an
uncommon, multi-layered form: a bright inner ring is surrounded by a
fainter layer of gas, all wrapped in a broad halo of ionised nitrogen.
The spectacle is bittersweet, as the brief phase of fusion in the core
will end after mere tens of thousands of years, leaving a white dwarf
that will never illuminate the clouds around it again.
This image itself is also a swan song, the final work of one of Hubble’s instruments: the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2). Installed in 1993 to replace the original Wide Field and
Planetary Camera, WFPC2 was responsible for some of Hubble’s most enduring images and fascinating discoveries. It in turn was replaced by the Wide Field Camera 3 in 2009, during Hubble’s final servicing mission.
The data for this image were taken a mere ten days before the
instrument was removed from the telescope, as a fitting send-off for
WFPC2 after 16 years’ work. The latest and most advanced processing
techniques have been used to bring the data to life one more time,
producing this breathtaking new view of Kohoutek 4-55.
Releases from NASA, HubbleSite, Spitzer, ESO, ESA, NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, Royal Astronomical Society, Harvard-Smithsonian Center For Astrophysics, Max Planck Institute, Gemini Observatory, Subaru Telescope, W. M. Keck Observatory, JPL-Caltech, ICRAR, Webb Space Telescope, etc
Monday, April 07, 2025
Swan song for stars and cameras
A planetary nebula, a glowing shell of material thrown off by a star. A small central region of greenish clouds is encircled by a glowing, jagged ring, like a hole torn in fabric. A band of silvery-blue clouds outside this is again encircled by a larger, fainter yellow ring of gas. Puffy, smoky clouds of orange and red gas billow out from there into a large oval nebula, fading into the dark background of space. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, K. Noll
Source: ESA/Hubble/potw