Cygnus: Bubble and Crescent
Credit & Copyright:
Abdullah Al-Harbi
As stars die, they create clouds.
Two stellar death clouds of gas and dust
can be found toward the high-flying constellation of the Swan (Cygnus)
as they drift through
rich star fields in the plane of our
Milky Way Galaxy.
Caught here within the
telescopic
field of view are the
Soap Bubble (lower left) and the
Crescent Nebula (upper right).
Both were formed at the final phase in the life of a star.
Also known as NGC 6888,
the Crescent Nebula was shaped as its bright, central massive
Wolf-Rayet
star, WR 136, shed its outer envelope in
a strong stellar wind.
Burning through fuel at a prodigious rate, WR 136 is near the end of
a short life
that should finish in a spectacular
supernova explosion.
Discovered in 2013, the Soap Bubble Nebula is likely a
planetary
nebula, the final shroud of a lower mass, long-lived, Sun-like star
destined to become a slowly cooling white dwarf.
Both stellar nebulas are about 5,000
light-years
distant, with the larger Crescent Nebula
spanning about 25 light-years across.
Within a few million years, both will likely have dispersed.