A Glowing Pool of Light: Planetary Nebula NGC 3132
About This Image
Release Date
November 05, 1998 12:00PM (EST)Read the Release
1998-39Permissions
Content Use PolicyCaption
NGC 3132 is a striking example of a planetary nebula. This expanding cloud of gas, surrounding a dying star, is known to amateur astronomers in the southern hemisphere as the "Eight-Burst" or the "Southern Ring" Nebula.
The name "planetary nebula" refers only to the round shape that many of these objects show when examined through a small visual telescope. In reality, these nebulae have little or nothing to do with planets, but are instead huge shells of gas ejected by stars as they near the ends of their lifetimes. NGC 3132 is nearly half a light year in diameter, and at a distance of about 2000 light years is one of the nearer known planetary nebulae. The gases are expanding away from the central star at a speed of 9 miles per second.
This image, captured by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, clearly shows two stars near the center of the nebula, a bright white one, and an adjacent, fainter companion to its upper right. (A third, unrelated star lies near the edge of the nebula.) The faint partner is actually the star that has ejected the nebula. This star is now smaller than our own Sun, but extremely hot. The flood of ultraviolet radiation from its surface makes the surrounding gases glow through fluorescence. The brighter star is in an earlier stage of stellar evolution, but in the future it will probably eject its own planetary nebula.
In the Heritage Team's rendition of the Hubble image, the colors were chosen to represent the temperature of the gases. Blue represents the hottest gas, which is confined to the inner region of the nebula. Red represents the coolest gas, at the outer edge. The Hubble image also reveals a host of filaments, including one long one that resembles a waistband, made out of dust particles which have condensed out of the expanding gases. The dust particles are rich in elements such as carbon. Eons from now, these particles may be incorporated into new stars and planets when they form from interstellar gas and dust. Our own Sun may eject a similar planetary nebula some 6 billion years from now.
Credits
The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA/NASA)Keywords
About The Object | |
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Object Name | NGC 3132, Eight-Burst Nebula, Southern Ring Nebula |
Object Description | Planetary Nebula |
R.A. Position | 10h 06m 58.54s |
Dec. Position | -40° 26' 00" |
Constellation | Vela |
Distance | 2,000 light-years (590 parsecs) |
Dimensions | NGC 3132 is ~0.4 light years in diameter. The image is 1.2 arcminutes on the vertical side. |
About The Data | |
Data Description | Principal Astronomers: R. Sahai, J. Trauger & R. Evans (Jet Propulsion Lab), and the WFPC2 Investigation Definition Team (IDT) |
Instrument | HST>WFPC2 |
Exposure Dates | December 7, 1995, Exposure Time: 1 hour |
Filters | F502N (OIII), F656N (H-alpha), and F658N (NII) |
About The Image | |
Color Info | Blue: F502N (OIII) Green: F656N (H-alpha) Red: F658N (NII) |
About The Object | |
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Object Name | A name or catalog number that astronomers use to identify an astronomical object. |
Object Description | The type of astronomical object. |
R.A. Position | Right ascension – analogous to longitude – is one component of an object's position. |
Dec. Position | Declination – analogous to latitude – is one component of an object's position. |
Constellation | One of 88 recognized regions of the celestial sphere in which the object appears. |
Distance | The physical distance from Earth to the astronomical object. Distances within our solar system are usually measured in Astronomical Units (AU). Distances between stars are usually measured in light-years. Interstellar distances can also be measured in parsecs. |
Dimensions | The physical size of the object or the apparent angle it subtends on the sky. |
About The Data | |
Data Description |
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Instrument | The science instrument used to produce the data. |
Exposure Dates | The date(s) that the telescope made its observations and the total exposure time. |
Filters | The camera filters that were used in the science observations. |
About The Image | |
Image Credit | The primary individuals and institutions responsible for the content. |
Publication Date | The date and time the release content became public. |
Color Info | A brief description of the methods used to convert telescope data into the color image being presented. |
Orientation | The rotation of the image on the sky with respect to the north pole of the celestial sphere. |