New Delhi:
NASA has released some stunning images of dying stars, offering the most intensive view of the planet Nabula NGC 1514 so far.
Images taken from James Web Space Telescope showing one of the two stars in the center, which sheds its layers of gas and dust as it reaches the end of its life cycle.
Different mid-reflective observations of the web highlight the subtle features of the nebula, especially its “fuzzy” dust rings and “holes” where the material is cracked in the core pink area.
The web is “running rings” around this planet Nabula, bringing it to a sharp focus with this new mid-end form. The center consists of a pair of wires, one of which shed its layers of dust and gas as it was near the end of its life cycle. https://t.co/Progjuhupr pic.twitter.com/kei1nf6ipr
– NASA web telescope (@nasawebb) 14 April, 2025
A network of more specific holes near the central stars indicates that the faster the material is punched from where it is punched. Its rings, first appear only in infrared lights, now resembles the complicated fuzzy bunches in complicated patterns.
Although rings around the NGC 1514 were found in 2010, webb has allowed researchers to examine the behavior of Nebula well.
Two stars in the center, which the web saw as the same object, is with bright diffraction spikes. They engage in an orange dust arc and class in a tight, extended nine -year orbit, NASA Said.
The scene was mainly built by one of these stars, which once larger than the sun. The space agency said that the hot, compact core of the star remained only after the end of its outer layers.
NGC 1514 is more likely to be the same as one hour of glasses with chopped chopped, but the web’s comments indicate that the nebula is at an angle of 60 degrees, it asserts that it is being poured from a can.
Can be strange forms because the fellow was very close to the star, while he was losing the material at his peak. This conversation can result in rings instead of a circle.
This scene will continue to develop for many more millenniums; It has been built for at least 4,000 years, NASA said.
NASA’s Wide-Feield Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) captured the NGC 1514 in 2010, but it was much less wide than the James Web Space Telescope.
A researcher and project scientist Mike Wrestler for the web’s Miri (Mid-Infrared Instrument) at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in southern California said, “Before the web, we were not able to detect most of this material, let it clearly inspect it.”
The NGC 1514 is located about 1,500 light-year away from the Earth and is a member of the Taurus constellation.