Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Weird Celestial Spiral Photo Explained

This remarkable picture Hubble Space Telescope photo of a celestial spiral shows one of the most perfect geometrical forms created in space. It captures the formation of an unusual pre-planetary nebula, known as IRAS 23166+1655, around the star LL Pegasi.
CREDIT: ESA/NASA & R. Sahai [Full Story]

   A photograph of a weird cosmic spiral in deep space taken by the Hubble Space Telescope is no trick of light ? it's astrophysics in action, scientists say.

The cosmic pinwheel snapshot released this week by the Hubble science team shows "one of the most perfect geometrical forms created in space," Hubble scientists said in a statement.
The photo shows an unusual pre-planetary nebula called IRAS 23166+1655 as it is forming around the dust-shrouded star LL Pegasi in the constellation Pegasus. 

   Despite their name, planetary nebulas have nothing to do with planets. The objects earned their name because they appear as small diffuse disks instead of individual stars.
What makes the Hubble photo stand out is its odd, but thin, spiral pattern winding around the star with unexpected regularity, researchers said. The pattern, which suggests a specific origin for the nebula, is composed of dust and gas streaking outwards at speeds of just over 31,000 mph (50,000 kph). The time it takes to create each shell in the spiral is about 800 years, astronomers say.
   The Hubble Space Telescope observed the cosmic spiral formation several years ago. The European Space Agency posted the snapshot to its Hubble telescope website Monday as the picture of the week.
Astronomers think the spiral formed because of the binary nature of LL Pegasi. The star is actually part of a double-star system and is losing material to its nearby stellar companion, which appears to have an orbital period of 800 years ? the same amount of time it takes to create each of the spiral's shells, they said.
Planetary nebulas are created by stars ranging between half the mass of our sun up to eight solar masses.    These stars do not end their lives in a supernova explosion. Instead, they gradually shed their outer layers of gas over time to create striking structures in space, researchers said.
   The star IRAS 23166+1655 is "just starting this process and the central star has yet to emerge from the cocoon of enveloping dust," they added.
The Hubble Space Telescope is a prolific orbiting observatory that has spent more than 20 years peering deep into the cosmos.
   NASA and the European Space Agency have invested some $10 billion into the long-lived space telescope, which was launched in April 1990. Astronauts last overhauled the aging telescope in May 2009, to extend the iconic observatory's life by up to 10 years.

   The other spiral that comes to mind is the unidentified flying object that was sighted over Norway last December. Some observers wondered if the glowing spiral shape was a warning signal from visiting aliens, or even a tryout for a holographic sky-hoax system dubbed Project Bluebeam. But the spiral pattern turned out to be the result of rocket fuel spewing from a wayward Russian booster.
 

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