Skip to main content

This stellar Crab Nebula image is the perfect way to celebrate Hubble's birthday

[ad_1]


The Hubble Space Telescope gave us a gift for its 29th birthday: This image of the Southern Crab Nebula. Located over 6,800 light-years from Earth, the hourglass-shaped formation of gas and dust—also known as Hen 2-104—was formed by two aging stars locked in a cosmic do-si-do in the constellation Centaurus.



The two swirling objects make up a binary star system, and they’re at very different stages in their lives. One is a white dwarf: A small, burnt-out core of a star that’s one of the densest objects in the universe (a spoonful of its matter would weigh as much as a truck). The other is a red giant: a bloated, cooled-down star that’s stopped burning hydrogen and started burning helium, which is a sign that it’s well on its way to becoming a white dwarf.



Because of its density, the white dwarf has an immense gravitational pull on the red giant, sucking matter off of its larger neighbor and twirling it into a high-energy ring of gas called an accretion disk. Eventually, all that energy heats the white dwarf up to a temperature of 15 million degrees, igniting the gas in the disk and causing a thermonuclear explosion called a nova. In the Southern Crab Nebula, all that gas shot outward in an hourglass shape, creating the symmetrical “legs” of the crab as it lit up interstellar gases and dust particles, possibly deposited there by a prior explosion.


Just a dot in the southern sky to the naked eye and low-powered telescopes, the Southern Crab Nebula was first distinguished from an ordinary star in 1989, when the crab leg structure was first observed by the European Southern Observatory’s La Silla Observatory in Chile. In 1999, Hubble photographed the nebula and revealed a smaller hourglass nested closer to the stars within the nebula. Twenty years later, it used its sharpest imaging mechanism yet, Wide Field Camera 3, to capture this latest image. The nested hourglasses of gas and dust could point to a previous explosion of matter from the red giant.


Rocketed to earth’s orbit on April 24, 1990 (yes, Hubble is a millennial), the telescope snapped this portrait in time for the 29th anniversary of that launch on Wednesday. In its nearly three decades of operation, Hubble has made over 1.4 million observations of almost 45,000 objects in space. It’s orbited Earth more than 169,000 times—a distance nearly equivalent to traveling from Earth to the outer edges of our solar system.



Hubble has one of the most perfectly made mirrors of any telescope, and its position above the atmosphere allows it to capture light that can’t be seen from earth’s surface, or gets muddied by the atmosphere. Its resolution has allowed it to peer so deep into space (and so far back in time) that it’s helping astronomers see closer to the birth of the universe.




[ad_2]

Written By Alex Schwartz

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ice technicians are the secret stars of the Winter Olympics

[ad_1] The emphasis of this year's two-week-long Winter Olympic Games has been placed squarely on the Olympians themselves. After all, the stated purpose of the international competition is to bring together the world’s greatest athletes in a nail-biting competition across fifteen different winter sports. But before the curlers, skiers, and skaters even arrived in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the Olympians of the ice technician world were already a few weeks deep in a competition of their own. Mark Callan of the World Curling Federation and Markus Aschauer of the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation both say they’re hoping to make the best ice the Winter Olympics have ever seen. To transform the barren concrete jungle of existing tracks and arenas into an ice- and snow-covered wonderland is an enormous undertaking. And it takes a keen understanding of the physics and chemistry that keeps frozen precipitation pristine. Curling Callan has been making and maintaining ice for m

In the wake of NYC terrorist attack, Trump says he's ordered increased 'Extreme Vetting'

[ad_1] President Donald Trump has requested for a heightened vetting program following Tuesday's terrorist attack in New York. @realDonaldTrump: I have just ordered Homeland Security to step up our already Extreme Vetting Program. Being politically correct is fine, but not for this! Earlier, he tweeted that the attack in lower Manhattan was committed by a "sick and deranged person." @realDonaldTrump: In NYC, looks like another attack by a very sick and deranged person. Law enforcement is following this closely. NOT IN THE U.S.A.! His remarks came after a motorist drove onto a busy bicycle path near the World Trade Center memorial and struck several people on Tuesday, leaving at least eight people dead and a dozen injured. NBC News repor

How to save everything you post to social media

[ad_1] If you get the urge to revisit that cute photo you posted some time last year, you'll have to scroll through your timeline for what feels like hours to track it back down. Instead, when you share a post on social media, also save it to your phone for safe-keeping. This will not only save your social media hits for posterity, but also make them easier to find if you ever need to rediscover them. In this guide, we focus on saving photos and videos, because text posts are slightly more complicated—the only way to really preserve text from Facebook and Twitter is to download your entire archive (we'll explain how to do this below), and Instagram and Snapchat don't let you save or export your instant messages at all. When it comes to photos and videos, there's a shortcut to make sure they stay on your phone: Originally film them through a dedicated app, which will save them to a gallery. Only then should you open up a social media app to share them. However, there'