NASA released new images Monday taken by the James Webb Space Telescope of the Ring Nebula – one of the first known examples of cosmic gas and dust formed by a dying star discovered by humans.
The
Ring Nebula is an early example of a planetary nebula – when gases and
emissions produced by a dying star emit a glowing, colorful shell.
The
images were captured by the Webb Telescope, which was developed in 2016
and equipped with high-resolution and high-sensitivity instruments that
allow it to view objects too old, distant, or faint for the Hubble Space Telescope.
A ‘surprising revelation’
Ring Nebula (MIRI image). (credit: ESA/Webb, NASA, CSA, M. Barlow (UCL), N. Cox (ACRI-ST), R. Wesson (Cardiff University))
“When
we first saw the images, we were stunned by the amount of detail in
them,” said Roger Wesson, from the Cardiff University School of Physics
and Astronomy, to NASA.
"The
bright ring that gives the nebula its name is composed of about 20,000
individual clumps of dense molecular hydrogen gas, each of them about as
massive as the Earth.”
The
“surprising revelation,” as Wesson called it, captured in these new
photographs led researchers to discover that arcs within the inner halo
of the nebula form every 280 years – a far faster time period than any
previously known for arcs to form within a nebula. Thus, researchers
believe that a companion star played a role in affecting the development
of the Ring Nebula.
“These
rings suggest that there must be a companion star in the system,
orbiting about as far away from the central star as Pluto does from our
Sun. As the dying star was throwing off its atmosphere, the companion
star shaped the outflow and sculpted it,” described Wesson.
NASA James Webb Telescope
Wesson also noted the tremendous capability of the Webb telescope. “We see curious ‘spikes’ pointing directly away from the central star, which are prominent in the infrared but were only very faintly visible in Hubble Space Telescope images.”
“No previous telescope had the sensitivity and the spatial resolution to uncover this subtle effect,” Webb explained.
The
massive $9 billion telescope is the most state-of-the-art space
telescope in existence. It is equipped with incredibly sensitive
instruments and infrared resolution that far exceed the capabilities of
other space telescopes, especially NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope.
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