Skip to main content

The Egg Nebula from the Hubble Telescope

Content of: The Egg Nebula from the Hubble Telescope

Posted by Specola Profile 02/25/26 at 02:16PM Science - Tech - Astronomy See more by Specola

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:

ver wonder what it would look like to crack open the Sun? The Egg Nebula, a dying Sun-like star, can unscramble this question. Pictured is a combination of several visible and infrared images of the nebula (also known as RAFGL 2688 or CRL 2688) taken with the Hubble Space Telescope. The star has shed its outer layers, and a bright, hot core (or "yolk") now illuminates the milky "egg white" shells of gas and dust surrounding the center. The central lobes and rings are structures of gas and dust recently ejected into space, with the dust being dense enough to block our view of the stellar core. Light beams emanate from that blocked core, escaping through holes carved in the older ejected material by newer, faster jets expelled from the star’s poles. Astronomers are still trying to figure out what causes the disks, lobes, and jets during this short (only a few thousand years!) phase of the star’s evolution, making this an egg-cellent image to study!

Photo by ESA/Hubble & NASA, B. Balick (U. Washington)

Grow your Local Community Board!  -  Post and Invite your friends and neighbors to join!

Click the Image to learn more about us

Giving Kids in Need the Chance to Read
  Non-profit organization - Seattle, WA

Powered by Volunteers | 360-794-7959

Read more from Pepe's Painting LLC

Snohomish, Skagit and Island County

Hunger impacts all of us | 360-435-1631