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        Set Twenty Three: Image 2 of 20: NGC 6537: Red Spider Planetary Nebula        
   
               
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47 Ursae Majoris System

NGC 6537: Red Spider Planetary Nebula

NGC 3372: Keyhole Nebula

AE Aurigae

NGC 1300

Large Cloud Of Magellan

M16: Pillars Of Creation

Thackeray's Globules in IC 2944

NGC 6822

Stellar 'Fireworks Finale'
 

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 binary star system. Internal winds emanating from the central stars, visible in the center, have been measured in excess of 1000 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 above representative-color picture. The Red Spider Nebula lies toward the constellation of Sagittarius. It's distance is not well known but estimated by some to be about 4000 light-years.

  NGC 2264: The Cone Nebula

Hot Stars in the Southern Milky Way

Sharpless 212

NGC 7023: The Iris Nebula

Galactic Center

NGC 4622: "Backwards" Spiral Galaxy

NGC 4631: The Whale Galaxy, Herring Galaxy

IC 1396: Elephant's Trunk Nebula

NGC 2244: Rosette Nebula

NGC 6397
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