Skip to content

June 29, 2015

The Big Picture: Nitrogen-rich star left a beautiful corpse

by John_A

A small minority of enormous stars explode in a fiery supernova after they run out of fuel and collapse. Regular stars die less spectacularly, but the remnants can still be gorgeous. Case in point is NGC 6153, a nebula about 4,000 light-years from Earth. The ethereal blueish, ellipse-shaped cloud (imaged by Hubble, above) was ejected by a sun-sized star after it burned up its fuel. However, the nebula contains an unusually large amount of elements like neon and argon, and five times the nitrogen of our sun. Why? Likely because its star formed in a corner of the Milky Way with a completely different composition than our own neck of the woods.

Filed under: Science

Comments

Via: io9

Source: ESA

Read more from News

Leave a comment

Note: HTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to comments