Red Spider Planetary Nebula from Webb
Oh what a
tangled web
a planetary nebula can weave.
The Red Spider Planetary Nebula
shows the complex structure that can result when a
normal star ejects
its outer gases and becomes a
white dwarf star.
Officially tagged
NGC
6537, this two-lobed symmetric
planetary nebula
houses one of the
hottest white dwarfs ever observed,
probably as part of a binary star system.
Internal winds flowing out from the central stars,
have been measured in excess of 1,000 kilometers per second.
These
winds expand the
nebula, flow along the nebula's walls, and cause waves of hot
gas and
dust to collide.
Atoms
caught in these colliding shocks radiate light shown in the
featured false-color
infrared picture by the
James Webb Space Telescope.
The
Red Spider Nebula lies toward the constellation of the Archer
(Sagittarius).
Its distance is not well known but has been
estimated by some to be about 4,000 light-years.