
The Egg Nebula from the Hubble Telescope
Image Credit & Copyright:Β ESA/HubbleΒ &Β NASA,Β B. BalickΒ (U. Washington)
Explanation:Β Ever wonder what it would look like to crack open the Sun? TheΒ Egg Nebula, a dyingΒ Sun-like star, can unscramble this question.Β PicturedΒ is a combination of several visible andΒ infraredΒ images of the nebula (also known asΒ RAFGL 2688Β orΒ CRL 2688) taken with theΒ Hubble Space Telescope. The star has shed its outer layers, and aΒ bright, hot coreΒ (or “yolk”) now illuminates the milky “egg white”Β shellsΒ of gas and dust surrounding the center. The central lobes and rings are structures of gas and dust recently ejected into space, with the dust being dense enough to block our view of theΒ stellar core. Light beams emanate from thatΒ blocked core, escaping through holes carved in the older ejected material by newer, fasterΒ jetsΒ expelled from theΒ starβs poles. Astronomers areΒ still trying to figure out what causes the disks, lobes, and jetsΒ during this short (only a few thousand years!) phase of the starβsΒ evolution, making this an egg-cellent image to study!
Tomorrow’s picture:Β spiral webb