Two Views of the Gas in the Southern Ring Nebula (NIRCam and MIRI Composite Images)

The NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope offers dramatically different views of the same scene! Each image combines near- and mid-infrared light from three filters from the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) and Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI).

Shown first is Webb’s image of the Southern Ring Nebula (NGC 3132) highlights the very hot gas that surrounds the central stars. This hot gas is banded by a sharp ring of cooler gas, which appears in both images.

Shown next is Webb’s image traces the star’s scattered outflows that have reached farther into the cosmos. Most of the molecular gas that lies outside the band of cooler gas is also cold. It is also far clumpier, consisting of dense knots of molecular gas that form a halo around the central stars.

By accounting for the temperatures and gas contents in both areas, inside and outside the band, and by combining Webb’s data with precise measurements from other observatories, scientists were able to create far more accurate models to demonstrate when gas was ejected by the central star.

What about the third star that is visible at the lower-right edge of the band within the nebula? From Webb’s vantage point, it appears within the scene, but isn’t part of the nebula itself. It’s merely “photobombing” this party.

 

Credit:

NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, O. De Marco (Macquarie University), J. DePasquale (STScI), N. Bartmann (ESA/Webb)

Music: Stellardrone - The Night Sky in Motion

About the Video

Id:southernring-comparison
Release date:12 December 2022, 17:57
Duration:20 s
Frame rate:25 fps

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