Hubble telescope celebrates 34th anniversary of observing the Little Dumbbell Nebula

On April 24, to celebrate the 34th anniversary of the launch of NASA’s legendary Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers took a snapshot of the Little Dumbbell Nebula (also known as Messier 76, M76 or NGC 650/651) located 3,400 light-years away. Polar constellation Perseus. This photogenic nebula is a favorite target of amateur astronomers.

Classified as a planetary nebula, M76 is an expanding shell of glowing gas ejected from a dying red giant star. The star eventually collapses into an ultra-dense and hot white dwarf. Planetary nebulae have nothing to do with planets, but they got their name because astronomers using low-power telescopes in the 1700s thought this type of object resembled a planet.

M76 consists of a ring (a central rod structure when viewed from the side) and two lobes on the two openings of the ring. Before a star burns up, it ejects rings of gas and dust. The ring may have been sculpted by the influence of a star that once had a binary companion. This shed material forms a thick disk of dust and gas along the orbital plane of the companion star. The putative companion star is not seen in the Hubble image, so it may have been later swallowed by the central star. The disk would serve as forensic evidence of stellar cannibalism.

The host star is collapsing to form a white dwarf. It is one of the hottest known stellar remnants, with temperatures reaching 250,000 degrees Fahrenheit, 24 times hotter than the surface of the Sun. The hot white dwarf can be seen as a small dot in the center of the nebula. The stars visible in the projection below it are not part of the nebula.

Two lobes of hot gas trapped by the disk escape from the top and bottom of the “belt” along the star’s axis of rotation perpendicular to the disk. They are driven by hurricane-like outflows of material from dying stars, tearing up space at 2 million miles per hour. This speed is enough to get from the Earth to the Moon in a little over seven minutes! This turbulent “stellar wind” is rushing in cooler, slower-moving gas that was ejected early in the star’s life, when it was a red giant. Intense ultraviolet radiation from super-hot stars causes the gas to glow. Red comes from nitrogen and blue comes from oxygen.

Given that our solar system is 4.6 billion years old, the entire nebula is a blip in the cosmic clock. It will disappear in about 15,000 years.

Hubble’s interstellar travels

Since its launch in 1990, Hubble has made 1.6 million observations of more than 53,000 celestial objects. To date, the Mikulski Space Telescope Archive at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, has 184 terabytes of processed data available for research and analysis by astronomers around the world. Since 1990, 44,000 scientific papers based on Hubble observations have been published. This space telescope is the most scientifically productive space astrophysics mission in NASA history. Demand to use Hubble is so high that it is currently oversubscribed by six to one.

Most of Hubble’s discoveries were not anticipated before launch, such as supermassive black holes, the atmospheres of exoplanets, gravitational lensing of dark matter, the presence of dark energy, and massive planet formation in stars.

Hubble will continue research in these areas and use its unique ultraviolet light capabilities to study topics such as solar system phenomena, supernova explosions, the composition of exoplanet atmospheres and the dynamic emission of galaxies. Hubble’s research continues to benefit from its long-baseline observations of solar system objects, stellar phenomena, and other exotic astrophysics in the universe.

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is designed to complement the Hubble Telescope, not replace it. Future Hubble studies will also take advantage of synergies with the Webb telescope, which observes the universe in infrared light. The combined wavelength coverage of the two space telescopes expands groundbreaking research in areas such as protostellar disks, exoplanet composition, unusual supernovae, galaxy cores and the chemistry of distant universes.

The Hubble Space Telescope has been operational for more than three decades and continues to make groundbreaking discoveries that shape our fundamental understanding of the universe. The Hubble Telescope is an international cooperation project between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope and mission operations. Lockheed Martin Aerospace, headquartered in Denver, Colorado, also supports Goddard’s mission operations. The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy and conducts Hubble science operations for NASA.

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Image Source : hubblesite.org

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