Hubble Telescope

(Video) Hubble – Invisible Universe Revealed

 

I can just never get enough of the photos Hubble sends back.  We know it is well beyond it’s expected mission life, but I’ll enjoy them while they still come.

… and I can hardly wait for it’s replacement to launch in the near future!

The long goodbye

A dying star’s final moments are captured in this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. The death throes of this star may only last mere moments on a cosmological timescale, but this star’s demise is still quite lengthy by our standards, lasting tens of thousands of years!

The star’s agony has culminated in a wonderful planetary nebula known as NGC 6565, a cloud of gas that was ejected from the star after strong stellar winds pushed the star’s outer layers away into space. Once enough material was ejected, the star’s luminous core was exposed and it began to produce ultraviolet radiation, exciting the surrounding gas to varying degrees and causing it to radiate in an attractive array of colours. These same colours can be seen in the famous and impressive Ring Nebula (heic1310), a prominent example of a nebula like this one.

Planetary nebulae are illuminated for around 10 000 years before the central star begins to cool and shrink to become a white dwarf. When this happens, the star’s light drastically diminishes and ceases to excite the surrounding gas, so the nebula fades from view.

A version of this image was entered into the Hubble’s Hidden Treasures basic image competition by contestant Matej Novak.

Credit:

ESA/Hubble & NASA
Acknowledgement: M. Novak

Source: You can see this photo and many many more at the Hubble Space Telescope Website.  I highly recommend the visit!


Comments

3 responses to “(Video) Hubble – Invisible Universe Revealed”

  1. IS THERE ANY WAY 2 SEE THIS FILM ELSE WHERE?

  2. LUV 2 SEE IT BIG FAN OF ANY THING OUT THERE

  3. Hi James … would love to find it in another place. Was a fabulous documentary that was unfortunately lost on that channel a while back. We’ll keep looking for it though …

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