Dominican University SOIS Omeka Site

NGC 6302: The "Butterfly Nebula"

Dublin Core

Title

NGC 6302: The "Butterfly Nebula"

Subject

NGC 6302

Description

ABOUT THIS IMAGE

Hubble was recently retrained on NGC 6302, known as the "Butterfly Nebula," to observe it across a more complete spectrum of light, from near-ultraviolet to near-infrared, helping researchers better understand the mechanics at work in its technicolor "wings" of gas. The observations highlight a new pattern of near-infrared emission from singly ionized iron, which traces an S shape from lower left to upper right. This iron emission likely traces the central star system’s most recent ejections of gas, which are moving at much faster speeds than the previously expelled mass.

The star or stars at its center are responsible for the nebula's appearance. In their death throes, they have cast off layers of gas periodically over the past couple thousand years. The "wings" of NGC 6302 are regions of gas heated to more than 36,000 degrees Fahrenheit that are tearing across space at more than 600,000 miles an hour.

NGC 6302 lies between 2,500 and 3,800 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius.

ABOUT THE OBJECT

Object Name:
NGC 6302

Object Description: 
Planetary Nebula

Object Position:
R. A. 17:13:44.21
Dec. -37:06:15.94

Constellation:
Scorpius

Distance:
3,400 light-years

Dimensions:
Image is 2.25 arcmin across (about 2 light-years)

Source

https://hubblesite.org/image/4680/gallery

Date

2020-06-18

Type

Still Image

Identifier

STScI-2020-31

Files

Citation

“NGC 6302: The "Butterfly Nebula",” Dominican University SOIS Omeka Site, accessed November 14, 2024, http://108.166.64.190/omeka222/items/show/1859.