Showing posts with label Stingray Nebula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stingray Nebula. Show all posts

Friday, December 04, 2020

Hubble Captures Unprecedented Fading of Stingray Nebula

Hen 3-1357/Stingray Nebula

Credit:  NASA, ESA, B. Balick (University of Washington), M. Guerrero (Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía), and G. Ramos-Larios (Universidad de Guadalajara)

 Astronomers have caught a rare look at a rapidly fading shroud of gas around an aging star. Archival data from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope reveal that the nebula Hen 3-1357, nicknamed the Stingray nebula, has faded precipitously over just the past two decades. Witnessing such a swift rate of change in a planetary nebula is exceeding rare, say researchers.

Images captured by Hubble in 2016, when compared to Hubble images taken in 1996, show a nebula that has drastically dimmed in brightness and changed shape. Bright blue fluorescent tendrils and filaments of gas toward the center of the nebula have all but disappeared, and the wavy edges that earned this nebula its aquatic-themed name are virtually gone. The young nebula no longer pops against the black velvet background of the vast universe.

“This is very, very dramatic, and very weird,” said team member Martín A. Guerrero of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía in Granada, Spain. “What we’re witnessing is a nebula’s evolution in real-time. In a span of years, we see variations in the nebula. We have not seen that before with the clarity we get with this view.”

Researchers discovered unprecedented changes in the light emitted by glowing nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen being blasted off by the dying star at the center of the nebula. The oxygen emission, in particular, dropped in brightness by a factor of nearly 1,000 between 1996 and 2016.

“Changes in nebulae have been seen before, but what we have here are changes in the fundamental structure of the nebula,” said Bruce Balick of the University of Washington Seattle, leader of the new research. “In most studies, the nebula usually gets bigger. Here, it’s fundamentally changing its shape and getting fainter, and doing so on an unprecedented time scale. Moreover, to our surprise, it’s not growing any larger. Indeed, the once-bright inner elliptical ring seems to be shrinking as it fades.”

Ground-based observations of other planetary nebulae have shown hints of changes in brightness over time, but those speculations haven’t been confirmed until now. Only Hubble can resolve the changes in structure in this tiny nebula. The new paper examines every image of the Stingray nebula from Hubble’s archives.

“Because of Hubble’s optical stability, we are very, very confident that this nebula is changing in brightness with time,” added Guerrero. “This is something that can only be confirmed with Hubble’s visual acuity.”

The researchers note the nebula’s rapid changes are a response to its central star, SAO 244567, expanding due to a temperature drop, and in turn emitting less ionizing radiation.

A 2016 study by Nicole Reindl now of the University of Potsdam, Germany, and a team of international researchers, also using Hubble data, noted the star at the center of the Stingray nebula, SAO 244567, is special in its own right.

Observations from 1971 to 2002 showed the temperature of the star skyrocketing from less than 40,000 to 108,000 degrees Fahrenheit, more than ten times hotter than the surface of our Sun. Now, Reindl and her research team has shown that SAO 245567 is cooling. Reindl speculates the temperature jump was caused by a brief flash of helium fusion that occurred in a shell around the core of the central star. Recently, the star appears to be backstepping into its early stage of stellar evolution.

“We’re very lucky to observe it just in that moment,” said Reindl. “During such a helium shell flash, it evolves very quickly and that implies short evolutionary timescales so we can’t usually see how these stars evolve. We just happened to be there at the right time to have caught that.”

The team studying the rapid fading of the Stingray nebula can only speculate at this time what’s in store for the future of this young nebula. At its present rates of fading, it’s estimated the nebula will barely be detectable in 20 or 30 years.

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy in Washington, D.C.

Source: HubbleSite

Related Links

Contacts

Hannah Braun / Ray Villard
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland
410-338-4244 / 410-338-4514

hbraun@stsci.edu / villard@stsci.edu

Bruce Balick
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

balick@uw.edu

Martín A. Guerrero
Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía, Granada, Spain

mar@iaa.es

Gerardo Ramos-Larios
Universidad de Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico

gerardo.astro@gmail.com



Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Astronomers observe star reborn in a flash

 PR Image heic1618a
Stingray Nebula and SAO 244567 

SAO 244567


Videos 

Evolution of SAO 244567
Evolution of SAO 244567



An international team of astronomers using Hubble have been able to study stellar evolution in real time. Over a period of 30 years dramatic increases in the temperature of the star SAO 244567 have been observed. Now the star is cooling again, having been reborn into an earlier phase of stellar evolution. This makes it the first reborn star to have been observed during both the heating and cooling stages of rebirth.

Even though the Universe is constantly changing, most processes are too slow to be observed within a human lifespan. But now an international team of astronomers have observed an exception to this rule. “SAO 244567 is one of the rare examples of a star that allows us to witness stellar evolution in real time”, explains Nicole Reindl from the University of Leicester, UK, lead author of the study. “Over only twenty years the star has doubled its temperature and it was possible to watch the star ionising its previously ejected envelope, which is now known as the Stingray Nebula.”

SAO 244567, 2700 light-years from Earth, is the central star of the Stingray Nebula and has been visibly evolving between observations made over the last 45 years. Between 1971 and 2002 the surface temperature of the star skyrocketed by almost 40 000 degrees Celsius. Now new observations made with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) on the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope have revealed that SAO 244567 has started to cool and expand.

This is unusual, though not unheard-of [1], and the rapid heating could easily be explained if one assumed that SAO 244567 had an initial mass of 3 to 4 times the mass of the Sun. However, the data show that SAO 244567 must have had an original mass similar to that of our Sun. Such low-mass stars usually evolve on much longer timescales, so the rapid heating has been a mystery for decades.

Back in 2014 Reindl and her team proposed a theory that resolved the issue of both SAO 244567’s rapid increase in temperature as well as the low mass of the star. They suggested that the heating was due to what is known as a helium-shell flash event: a brief ignition of helium outside the stellar core [2].

This theory has very clear implications for SAO 244567’s future: if it has indeed experienced such a flash, then this would force the central star to begin to expand and cool again — it would return back to the previous phase of its evolution. This is exactly what the new observations confirmed. As Reindl explains: “The release of nuclear energy by the flash forces the already very compact star to expand back to giant dimensions — the born-again scenario.”

It is not the only example of such a star, but it is the first time ever that a star has been observed during both the heating and cooling stages of such a transformation.

Yet no current stellar evolutionary models can fully explain SAO 244567’s behaviour. As Reindl elaborates: “We need refined calculations to explain some still mysterious details in the behaviour of SAO 244567. These could not only help us to better understand the star itself but could also provide a deeper insight in the evolution of central stars of planetary nebulae.”

Until astronomers develop more refined models for the life cycles of stars, aspects of SAO 244567’s evolution will remain a mystery.




Notes

[1] The other star thought to have experienced the same type of helium flash event (see [2]) is FG Sagittae, located in the constellation Sagitta, making SAO 244567 the second of its kind. However, other objects undergoing similar “born-again” scenarios are known, including Sakurai’s Object, located in Sagittarius.

[2] Helium flash events, also known as late thermal pulses, occur late in the evolution of about 25% of low- to medium-mass stars. After evolving off the main sequence, these stars enter the red giant phase, where the star expands dramatically. Various changes occur in the star’s chemical and physical composition during this phase, until it has burnt most of the helium available in its core, which is by then composed of carbon and oxygen. Helium fusion continues in a thin shell around the core, but then turns off as the helium becomes depleted. This allows hydrogen fusion to start in a layer above the helium layer. After enough additional helium accumulates, helium fusion is reignited, leading to a thermal pulse which eventually causes the star to expand, cool and brighten temporarily.



More Information

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA.


The results will be presented in the paper “Breaking news from the HST: The central star of the Stingray Nebula is now returning towards the AGB”, published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS).


The international team of astronomers in this study consists of Nicole Reindl (University of Leicester, UK; Eberhard Karls University, Germany), T. Rauch (Eberhard Karls University, Germany), M. M. Miller Bertolami (UNLP-CONICET, Argentina), H. Todt (University of Potsdam, Germany), K. Werner (Eberhard Karls University, Germany)

Image credit: NASA, ESA/Hubble
 


Links



Contacts 

Nicole Reindl
University of Leicester
Leicester, United Kingdom
Tel: +44 116 223 1385
Email:
nr152@leicester.ac.uk

Mathias Jäger
ESA/Hubble, Public Information Officer
Garching bei München, Germany
Tel: +49 176 62397500
Email:
mjaeger@partner.eso.org