‘Amazing’ – Voir la nébuleuse de l’œil de chat en 3D pour la première fois

Image de la nébuleuse de l’oeil de chat prise par le télescope spatial Hubble. Crédit : NASA/CXC/SAO/K.Arcand, SYSTEM Sounds (M. Russo, A. Santaguida)

Des astronomes découvrent des anneaux avec une symétrie presque parfaite dans la nébuleuse de l’œil de chat

Les chercheurs ont construit le premier modèle 3D généré par ordinateur de la nébuleuse Cat’s Eye, révélant une paire d’anneaux symétriques autour de la coque externe de la nébuleuse. La symétrie des anneaux indique qu’ils ont été formés par un courant-jet provenant de l’étoile centrale de la nébuleuse. Cela fournit des preuves solides d’une étoile binaire au centre de la nébuleuse. L’étude vient d’être publiée dans la revue Avis mensuels de la Royal Astronomical Society Il était dirigé par Ryan Claremont.

Une nébuleuse planétaire se forme lorsqu’une étoile mourante éjecte sa couche externe de gaz, créant la structure colorée en forme de coquille caractéristique des nébuleuses planétaires. NGC 6543, ou nébuleuse de l’Œil de chat, est l’une des nébuleuses planétaires les plus complexes connues. Il se trouve à un peu plus de 3 000 années-lumière de la Terre et peut être vu dans la constellation de Draco. La nébuleuse de l’Œil de chat a également été vue en détail par[{ » attribute= » »>Hubble Space Telescope, exhibiting a complicated structure of knots, spherical shells, and arc-like filaments.

Cat's Eye Nebula

A side-by-side comparison of the three-dimensional model of the Cat’s Eye Nebula created by Clairmont and the Cat’s Eye Nebula as photographed by the Hubble Space Telescope. Ryan Clairmont (left), NASA, ESA, HEIC, and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA) (right) (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0).

The nebula’s mysterious structure confounded astrophysicists because it could not be explained by previously accepted theories for planetary nebula formation. More recent research showed that precessing jets were potential shaping mechanisms in complex planetary nebulae such as NGC 6543, but lacked a detailed model.

Clairmont, an astronomy enthusiast, decided to try to establish the detailed 3D structure of the Cat’s Eye to find out more about the potential mechanism that gave it its intricate shape. To do this, he sought out the help of Dr. Wolfgang Steffen of The National Autonomous University of Mexico and Nico Koning from the University of Calgary, who developed SHAPE, 3D astrophysical modeling software particularly suitable for planetary nebulae.

The researchers used spectral data from the San Pedro Martir National Observatory in Mexico to reconstruct the nebula’s three-dimensional structure’s three-dimensional structure. These provide detailed information on the internal motion of material in the nebula. Together with these data and images from the Hubble Space Telescope, Clairmont constructed a novel 3D model, establishing that rings of high-density gas were wrapped around the outer shell of the Cat’s Eye. Surprisingly, the rings are almost perfectly symmetric to each other, suggesting they were formed by a jet – a stream of high-density gas ejected in opposite directions from the nebula’s central star.

The jet exhibited precession, similar to the wobbling motion of a spinning top. As the jet wobbled, or precessed, it outlined a circle, creating the rings around the Cat’s Eye. However, the data indicates the rings are only partial, meaning the precessing jet never completed a full 360-degree rotation, and that the emergence of the jets was only a short-lived phenomenon. The duration of outflows is an important piece of information for the theory of planetary nebulae. Since only binary stars can power a precessing jet in a planetary nebula, the team’s findings are strong evidence that a system of this type exists at the center of the Cat’s Eye.

As the angle and direction of the jet changed over time, it likely formed all of the features seen in the Cat’s Eye, including the jets and knots. Using the three-dimensional model, the researchers were able to calculate the tilt and opening angle of the precessing jet based on the orientation of the rings.

Ryan Clairmont, the lead author of the paper and now a prospective undergraduate at Stanford University stated, “When I first saw the Cat’s Eye Nebula, it was astonishing. It had a beautiful, perfectly symmetric structure. I was even more surprised that its 3D structure was not fully understood.”

He continued, “It was very rewarding to be able to do astrophysical research of my own that actually has an impact in the field. Precessing jets in planetary nebulae are relatively rare, so it’s important to understand how they contribute to the shaping of more complex systems like the Cat’s Eye. Ultimately, understanding how they form provides insight into the eventual fate of our Sun, which will itself one day become a planetary nebula.”

Reference: “Morphokinematic modelling of the point-symmetric Cat’s Eye, NGC 6543: Ring-like remnants of a precessing jet” by Ryan Clairmont, Wolfgang Steffen and Nico Koning, 15 September 2022, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac2375

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