Icy Blue Wings of Hen: NASA Image of the Day
I haven’t posted one of these in a while, but I couldn’t resist this one. Look how cool this is. Its like a giant blue propeller flying straight toward us. Space is awesome.
Hubble Watches the Icy Blue Wings of Hen 2-437
In this cosmic snapshot, the spectacularly symmetrical wings of Hen 2-437 show up in a magnificent icy blue hue. Hen 2-437 is a planetary nebula, one of around 3,000 such objects known to reside within the Milky Way.
Located within the faint northern constellation of Vulpecula (The Fox), Hen 2-437 was first identified in 1946 by Rudolph Minkowski, who later also discovered the famous and equally beautiful M2-9 (otherwise known as the Twin Jet Nebula). Hen 2-437 was added to a catalog of planetary nebula over two decades later by astronomer and NASA astronaut Karl Gordon Henize.
Planetary nebulae such as Hen 2-437 form when an aging low-mass star — such as the sun — reaches the final stages of life. The star swells to become a red giant, before casting off its gaseous outer layers into space. The star itself then slowly shrinks to form a white dwarf, while the expelled gas is slowly compressed and pushed outwards by stellar winds. As shown by its remarkably beautiful appearance, Hen 2-437 is a bipolar nebula — the material ejected by the dying star has streamed out into space to create the two icy blue lobes pictured here.
Courtesy of NASA.org | Image credit: ESA (European Space Agency)/Hubble & NASA, Acknowledgement: Judy Schmidt | Text credit: ESA
Conor says:
Andy Garcia says:
Joe says: