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NGC 6543, the Cat's Eye nebula
A planetary nebula is an astronomical object that usually appears
nebulous and disk-like in low-resolution observations. Because of this appearance, similar to the appearance of planets in early observations, the "planetary" adjective was attached and has since been
retained for historical consistency.
According to current observations and models, planetary nebulae in fact have little to do with planets. Instead, as a small
star (less than a few times the mass of the Sun)
grows older, it tends to throw off upper layers of stellar
material in various episodes of fusion reactions. While the central
progenitor star dwindles to a white dwarf, the thrown-off gases form a cloud
of material around it. It is this cloud which is designated as a planetary nebula. The remains of the star which produced the
nebula is also responsible for the energy which causes it to glow. The Sun is predicted to become a planetary nebula at least 5
billion years in the future.
Some of the more famous examples of this type of object are the Ring
Nebula, the Helix nebula, the Eskimo Nebula and the Cat's Eye nebula.
Related topics
- List of planetary nebulas
References and external links:
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