A Smoke Ring and a Shooting Star
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Posted
Monday, Dec. 24, 2012, at 8:00 AM ET SLATE
André van der Hoeven
is a Dutch astrophotographer whose work has graced my blog many times
in the past. He sent me a note recently: He’s been taking archived
images of astronomical objects from telescopes like Hubble and Subaru
and combining them. This way he can create an image that has both the
fine detail due to Hubble’s excellent eyesight as well as the wide field
and faint detail that comes from a bigger telescope like Subaru (an
8-meter giant in Hawaii).
The reason he sent me the note was because he had finished working on
a picture of the Ring Nebula, one of the finest examples of a planetary
nebula—a dying star shedding winds of gas—in the sky. His final product is nothing short of amazing:
Very deep image of the Ring Nebula, the dying gasps of an old star.
Image credit: NASA/ESA/The Hubble Heritage Team (AURA/STScI/NASA); Subaru Telescope/NAOJ/Robert Gendler; André van der Hoeven
Image credit: NASA/ESA/The Hubble Heritage Team (AURA/STScI/NASA); Subaru Telescope/NAOJ/Robert Gendler; André van der Hoeven
Gorgeous, isn’t it? I’ve observed the Ring Nebula literally hundreds
of times; it’s big, bright, and very easy to find in the summer and
autumn sky. Even through a small telescope you can make out that inner
ring, which looks like a hazy smoke ring floating in the eyepiece. It
looks almost like the solid disk of a planet, which is why these objects
are called planetary nebulae.
Hubble image of the inner part of the Ring Nebula.
Image credit: The Hubble Heritage Team (AURA/STScI/NASA)
But what’s truly amazing is all that outer material roiling around
it, completely invisible in nearly every picture I’ve seen. That stuff
is ethereally thin and incredibly faint, so it only shows up in deep
images taken with big telescopes.
All of this gas was expelled by the star in the very center of the
nebula, which was once very much like the Sun (though probably about
twice our star’s mass). After billions of years of converting hydrogen
to helium in its core and generating fierce amounts of energy, it
started to run out of fuel. The star expanded into a red giant, blowing a
wind of subatomic particles into space; that’s what makes up the shells
of gas you see in the deep image.
Eventually, the star started to contract, heating up and blowing a
faster wind that caught up with and slammed into the older material.
That’s what forms the brighter inner ring. Interestingly, it’s not
actually shaped like a ring: Studies have shown it’s actually
barrel-shaped and oriented so that we’re looking down the barrel. It
only appears to be shaped like a ring due to our viewing angle.
All of that is cool just by itself. But wait! There’s more!
While assembling the images together, van der Hoeven noticed
something odd. A foreground star that happened to lie between us and the
inner ring appeared to move between images. Curious, he found older
images of the nebula, one from 1959 and another from as far back as
1922! Adding them together, you can clearly see this star moving across
the frame:
How cool is that? The triangle connects three fixed stars, and the moving star—called 2MASS 18533272+3301234—is the red one in the middle of the triangle. Its motion is real: Like planets orbiting the Sun, stars orbit the center of the Milky Way galaxy. That motion can be hundreds of kilometers per second, but appears diminished to invisibility due to their vast distances. Over time, though, it adds up, and can be detected. Astronomers call this proper motion. This star seems to be moving about 0.1 arcseconds per year, a very small amount: The Moon is 1800 arcseconds across, so it would take this star nearly 20 millennia to move across a parcel of the sky the size of the Moon.
However, with telescopes, and the patience to wait 90 years, that
motion is still detectable. Van der Hoeven also did some rough
measurements and found the star is likely to be about 800 light years
away, about a third of the distance to the Ring nebula itself.
From what I can tell, this star’s movement has never been noticed
before, so congrats to van der Hoeven for his keen eye! Perhaps we
should name the star after him. “Van der Hoeven’s star” has … wait for
it, wait for it … a nice ring to it.
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