NGC 6302 - Butterfly Nebula, Steven Marx

NGC 6302 - Butterfly Nebula

NGC 6302 - Butterfly Nebula, Steven Marx

NGC 6302 - Butterfly Nebula

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Description

NGC 6302 - Raw fits data obtained from Hubble Legacy Archive.

Butterfly Emerges from Stellar Demise in Planetary Nebula NGC 6302

This celestial object looks like a delicate butterfly. But it is far from serene.

What resemble dainty butterfly wings are actually roiling cauldrons of gas heated to more than 36,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The gas is tearing across space at more than 600,000 miles an hour -- fast enough to travel from Earth to the moon in 24 minutes!

A dying star that was once about five times the mass of the Sun is at the center of this fury. It has ejected its envelope of gases and is now unleashing a stream of ultraviolet radiation that is making the cast-off material glow. This object is an example of a planetary nebula, so-named because many of them have a round appearance resembling that of a planet when viewed through a small telescope.

NGC 6302 lies about 4,000 light-years away in the arachnologically correct constellation of the Scorpion (Scorpius).

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    NGC 6302 - Butterfly Nebula, Steven Marx
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  • NGC 6302 - Butterfly Nebula, Steven Marx
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NGC 6302 - Butterfly Nebula, Steven Marx