Photo # 2 (Mar 2010)
X-RAYS FROM THE
CAT'S EYE NEBULA
listen; there’s a hell of a good
universe next door: let’s go.
- E.
E. Cummings

Credit: X-ray:
NASA/CXC/SAO; Optical: NASA/STScI
Haunting patterns within planetary nebula NGC 6543 readily suggest its popular
moniker - the Cat's Eye nebula. Starting in 1995, stunning false-color optical
images from the Hubble Space Telescope detailed the swirls of this glowing
nebula, known to be the gaseous shroud expelled from a dying sun-like star
about 3,000 light-years from Earth. This composite picture combines the latest
Hubble optical image of the Cat's Eye with new x-ray data from the orbiting
Chandra Observatory and reveals surprisingly intense x-ray emission indicating
the presence of extremely hot gas. X-ray emission is shown as blue-purple hues
superimposed on the nebula's center. The nebula's central star itself is
clearly immersed in the multimillion degree, x-ray emitting gas. Other pockets
of x-ray hot gas seem to be bordered by cooler gas emitting strongly at optical
wavelengths, a clear indication that expanding hot gas is sculpting the visible
Cat's Eye filaments and structures. Gazing into the Cat's Eye, astronomers see
the fate of our sun, destined to enter its own planetary nebula phase of
evolution ... in about 5 billion years.
Gazing out into the universe, we get a better sense of the magical series of events that have combined to make life on our planet possible.
- Dan Benor, MD