Planetary nebula M76 (NGC650 and NGC651)
About this image
About this image
This is a two-minute exposure taken
on the night of September 1st 1994 (UT of observation 02/09/94:07:20).
This photograph shows a region 170 arc seconds
square which has been compressed in brightness (approximately a double
logarithm) to show both bright and faint features. Observing conditions
during this phase of the commissioning were not ideal, but this image has
a "seeing" measurement (average
FWHM of several stars) of about 0.9 arc seconds.
The image has not been re-oriented to remove either the CCD orientation or the
field rotation of the altitude-azimuth design of the WIYN telescope:
NW is up, SE to the right.
About this object
The planetary nebula M76 was given two NGC numbers because Herschel believed it
to be an unresolved double nebula. It is one of the faintest Messier objects,
with an integrated visual magnitude fainter than 12 and generally low surface
brightness. The sharp edges of the central rectangular portion contrast
with the large wisp-like extensions appearing as two overlapping ellipses
centered on the short axis of the rectangle. The central star is still
visible at a photographic magnitude of 16.5, and is variously sized from
0.6 solar masses to 0.9 solar masses at temperatures from below 100,000K
to above 170,000K. Combining the observed morphology with measurements of the
velocity field across the nebula, it becomes quite difficult to construct
a physical model for just how this central star ejected its envelope.
The two current best suggestions are a double coaxial toroid, and a
distorted double coaxial toroid on the surface of a cone. Both models have
some trouble reproducing both the surface brightness variations and the
velocity structure, but the conical model is slightly better. Conical
ejection could be due to rotation of the stellar envelope, to preferential
ejection along the magnetic poles of an oblique rotator, to the structure
of the extended pre-planetary phase being frozen-in, or even to the effect
of a common-envelope close binary. Clearly, an explanation is not yet
forthcoming, and M76 continues to be one of the more interesting and
attractive planetary nebulae in the sky.
Location: 01 38.8 +57 19 (1950.0), distance: about 2500 light-years,
Size: about 0.7 light-years across.
More: nebulae page, planetary nebulae page, stars page, messier page, WIYN nebulae page, WIYN planetary nebulae page, WIYN stars page, WIYN messier page.
Minimum credit line: D.Sawyer, A.McDonald/WIYN/NOAO/NSF
Downloadable versions:
400 x 400 89kb 8 bit B&W GIF (on this page)
850 x 850 727kb 24 bit B&W TIFF
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