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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Stages of a star's death

Posted: Tuesday, September 11, 2007 7:34 PM by Alan Boyle


NASA / ESA / STScI / AURA
The planetary nebula He 2-47 has six glowing lobes of gas, at left, leading
astronomers to nickname it the "Starfish." The nebula at right, NGC 5315, has an
X-shaped structure. Click on the images for a video about planetary nebulae.

The Hubble Space Telescope documents the beautiful stages of death for stars like our sun in a newly released series of four images.

In the first images, stars can be seen blowing away dense clouds of gas – and in the last images, those clouds have blossomed into colorful cosmic butterflies.

It wouldn't be such a pretty sight if you were right on the scene, of course. Toward the end of a sunlike star's 10 billion-year life, the hydrogen at the core runs out – and as a result, the core shrinks and heats up, while the outer layers of the star expand and cool off. The star becomes a red giant, potentially engulfing planets in its path. That's what's likely to happen to our own Earth as the sun enters its last years.

Clouds of gas puff away from the central star and are set aglow by the star's radiation. Through the small telescopes of the 18th century, the star and its surroundings would look like a fuzzy planet, leading astronomers to call the phenomenon a "planetary nebula."

The first two Hubble pictures, seen above, show young planetary nebulae just at the start of the show. The pictures aren't exactly what you'd see with the naked eye. Rather, they've been color-coded to reflect the different elements present in the gas cloud. Red stands for nitrogen, green for hydrogen, blue for oxygen.

He 2-47, at left, is youngest and has the smallest cloud, dominated by relatively cool nitrogen gas. In today's photo advisory, the Hubble team says the nebula has been nicknamed "the Starfish" because of its six-lobed shape. The shape suggests that the star puffed out gas and dust at least three times in three different directions.

NGC 5315, at right, has been percolating for a longer time. As a result, the cloud is spread out wider, with hydrogen and oxygen starting to come to the fore. The nebula's X-shaped structure suggests that the star ejected gas and dust in two opposing directions during two separate outbursts, the scientists say.

The images below show planetary nebulae at a stage perhaps thousands of years more advanced than the nebulae above.


NASA / ESA / STScI / AURA
NGC 5307 displays a spiral pattern, at left. IC 4593 has strange-looking "bullets"
stretching out from its shell, at right. Click on the image to watch a video about
planetary nebulae from the Space Telescope Science Institute.

The dynamics of the gas blown out by the central star shape extended shells – and in the process, strange-looking tails and spirals may crop up. NGC 5307, at left, displays a spiral pattern that may be due to the wobbling motion of the central star as it spewed gas like a cosmic lawn sprinkler. The enigmatic "bullets" of glowing gas that show up in the nebula IC 4593, at right, have been the subject of more than one research paper over the years.

All these nebulae are in our own Milky Way galaxy, at distances of about 7,000 light-years from Earth. The snapshots were taken in February using Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 and presented as part of the Space Telescope Science Institute's Hubble Heritage program.

Planetary nebulae are thought to be fleeting phenomena, lasting for only 10,000 years or so before they fizzle out. Click on either of the images to launch a video from the Space Telescope Science Institute that explains more of the science behind dying stars, or click through our slide show of planetary nebulae.

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Comments

we can look for dark matter underground, but we die like rome, because we cant figure that crime comes from out kids...world is standing upside down-alt0134
Mainstream astrophysicists have been slow to recognize that these bipolar morphologies for these observations are typical of laboratory plasma z-pinches.  The fact that they are noticing spirals only validates the idea because the spirals likely represent the Birkeland current filaments that are feeding these structures with electrical energy.  Within this alternate view, these structures are not temporary explosions, but rather relatively permanent.

Of course, mainstream astrophysicists refuse to accept that space plasmas are electrical phenomenon (even though plasmas in the laboratory are electrical).  They prefer to believe that plasmas act as fluids and respond to gravity because that's what they were taught in school.  But, we increasingly see evidence that there are filamentary structures in the universe (like at some "black holes") that are simply too long for the light we're receiving to not be replenished with energy.  X-ray generating particles, for instance, should only shine for 100 light years at most.  When we see filaments that are 1,000 times longer than that -- and we do -- that means that our mainstream theories for how plasmas operate in space are completely broken.  It suggests that plasmas in space are likely electrical, and that single realization has enormous consequences that we'll likely see unfold over the next few decades.

It would be wise for people to keep a very open mind about what you're seeing in these sorts of pictures, and remember that if you see a dumbbell type of shape in space, that that is what we already see plasmas doing in the laboratory when we excite them with large amounts of electrical charge.
Packets! lay off that stuff willya? yer barely comprehensible.
saw the title, thought this was about Lindsay, Britney and Paris
I always open conversations at cocktail parties with quotes from packets. It seems to be working, as I have two dates lined for next week. Thanks!!!
I have to share this - when I read the headline the first thing I thought was, "Not another article on Britney Spears!'. Thankfully it was not.
Yeah, those mainstream astrophysicists -- what a bunch of sellouts.

We need some underground astrophysicists... maybe that's what Packets was traying to say.
Maybe Packets is really Brittany trying to google herself
A true snap shot of how science and math are dying in this country; an article about the phases of dying stars draws one scientific response and a half dozen about Brittney Spears...sad, just sad.

I am glad it isn't about her, and the stuff Chris was talking about is a tad bit over my head but still interesting reading.

Chris Reeve: If plasmas in space are ongoing electrical phenomena, does that mean they cannot be affected by gravity?

YouveGottobekiddingme: You  can't pursue astronomy or  astrophysics "underground," in either sense of the term. In the literal sense,it's simply impossible; in the figurative sense, you couldn't afford it.

[...]

Tonight over Florida at about 8pm,I saw what looked liked to be a star with a slight fuzz around it.Then I saw the fuzz around what appeared to be a star get much bigger while the light or star begin to dissipate. AT the same time I looked at it move very slowly in another direction in the universe. This was also witnessed by my kids,we all agreed we have never seen this happen before.Did we just witness the death of a star? p.s. it was directly over our heads moving very,very slowly to the northeast.


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