The Pencil Nebula is pictured in a new image from ESO's La Silla
Observatory in Chile. This peculiar cloud of glowing gas is part of a
huge ring of wreckage left over after a supernova explosion that took
place about 11 000 years ago. This detailed view was produced by the
Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope.
Despite the tranquil and apparently unchanging beauty of a starry
night, the Universe is far from being a quiet place. Stars are being
born and dying in an endless cycle, and sometimes the death of a star
can create a vista of unequalled beauty as material is blasted out into
space to form strange structures in the sky.
This new image from the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre
telescope at ESO's La Silla Observatory in Chile shows the Pencil Nebula
[1] against a rich starry background. This oddly shaped cloud, which is
also known as NGC 2736, is a small part of a supernova remnant [2] in
the southern constellation of Vela (The Sails). These glowing filaments
were created by the violent death of a star that took place about 11 000
years ago. The brightest part resembles a pencil; hence the name, but
the whole structure looks rather more like a traditional witch's broom.
The Vela supernova remnant is an expanding shell of gas that
originated from the supernova explosion. Initially the shock wave was
moving at millions of kilometres per hour, but as it expanded through
space it ploughed through the gas between the stars, which has slowed it
considerably and created strangely shaped folds of nebulosity. The
Pencil Nebula is the brightest part of this huge shell.
This new image shows large, wispy filamentary structures, smaller
bright knots of gas and patches of diffuse gas. The nebula's luminous
appearance comes from dense gas regions that have been struck by the
supernova shock wave. As the shock wave travels through space, it rams
into the interstellar material. At first, the gas was heated to millions
of degrees, but it then subsequently cooled down and is still giving
off the faint glow that was captured in the new image.
By looking at the different colours of the nebula, astronomers have
been able to map the temperature of the gas. Some regions are still so
hot that the emission is dominated by ionised oxygen atoms, which glow
blue in the picture. Other cooler regions are seen glowing red, due to
emission from hydrogen.
The Pencil Nebula measures about 0.75 light-years across and is
moving through the interstellar medium at about 650 000 kilometres per
hour. Remarkably, even at its distance of approximately 800 light-years
from Earth, this means that it will noticeably change its position
relative to the background stars within a human lifetime. Even after 11
000 years the supernova explosion is still changing the face of the
night sky.
Notes
[1] The Pencil Nebula, also known as NGC 2736 and sometimes nicknamed
Herschel's Ray, was discovered by British astronomer John Herschel back
in 1835 while he was in South Africa. He described it as "an
extraordinary long narrow ray of excessively feeble light."
[2] A supernova is a violent stellar explosion, resulting from the
death of either a high-mass star or a white dwarf in a close double star
system. The structure resulting from the explosion is called the
supernova remnant. This consists of ejected material expanding at
supersonic velocities into the surrounding interstellar medium.
Supernovae are the main source of the heavier chemical elements in the
interstellar medium, which in turn leads to the chemical enrichment of a
new generation of stars and planets.
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