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Post by ~*~Kit_The_Kat~*~ on Nov 9, 2003 14:56:00 GMT -5
The last view of a dying sun-like star The Egg Nebula, also known as CRL 2688. imgsrc.hubblesite.org/hu/db/1997/11/images/a/formats/web_print.jpg [/img] The Egg Nebula, also known as CRL 2688, is shown on the left as it appears in visible light and on the right as it looks in infrared light. Both Hubble views recount the last gasps of a dying, Sun-like star. Objects like the Egg Nebula are helping astronomers understand how stars like our Sun expel carbon and nitrogen ? elements crucial for life ? into space. Studies on the Egg Nebula show that these dying stars eject matter at high speeds along a preferred axis and may even have multiple jet-like outflows. The signature of the collision between this fast-moving material and the slower, out-flowing shells is the glow of hydrogen molecules [the red material] captured in the right-hand image.
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