
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A telescope in Chile has captured a stunning new picture of a grand and graceful cosmic butterfly.
The National Science Foundation’s NoirLab released the picture Wednesday.
Snapped last month by the Gemini South telescope, the aptly named Butterfly Nebula is 2,500 to 3,800 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius. A single light-year is 6 trillion miles.
At the heart of this bipolar nebula is a white dwarf star that cast aside its outer layers of gas long ago. The discarded gas forms the butterflylike wings billowing from the aging star, whose heat causes the gas to glow.
Schoolchildren in Chile chose this astronomical target to celebrate 25 years of operation by the International Gemini Observatory.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Syrian army says recent drone attacks targeted its bases near Iraq, most shot down - 2
A definitive Manual for the Over-Ear Earphones - 3
Vote in favor of Your #1 Instructive Toy: Learning and Tomfoolery Joined - 4
Explainer-What Novo Nordisk's weight-loss pill approval means for company, patients - 5
Find the Techniques for Powerful Review Propensities: Opening Your Scholarly Potential
Top 10 Moving Style Architects of the Year
Giude to Best Web based Learning Stage
Vote In favor of Your Favored Distributed computing Administration
Activists guilty over Palestine protest breach
German foreign minister heads to China to talk rare-earth exports
SpaceX launches Starlink missions in dual-coast spaceflight doubleheader (videos)
Novo Nordisk justifies reasoning behind failed GLP-1 Alzheimer's trials
Pick Your Number one Sort Of Music
The 20 Most sultry Style of the Time













