3D Homunculus Nebula
Science Credit:
W. Steffen (UNAM),
M. Teodoro, T.I. Madura,
If
you're looking
for something
to print with that new
3D printer, try out a copy of the Homunculus Nebula.
The dusty, bipolar cosmic cloud is around 1 light-year across
but is slightly
scaled
down for printing to
about 1/4 light-nanosecond or 80 millimeters.
The full scale Homunculus surrounds Eta Carinae,
famously unstable
massive stars in a binary system
embedded in the extensive
Carina Nebula
about 7,500 light-years distant.
Between 1838 and 1845, Eta Carinae
underwent the Great Eruption becoming
the second brightest star in planet Earth's night sky
and ejecting the Homunculus Nebula.
The
new 3D model of the still expanding Homunculus
was created by
exploring
the nebula with the European Southern Observatory's
VLT/X-Shooter.
That instrument is capable of mapping the
velocity of molecular hydrogen
gas through the nebula's dust at a fine resolution.
It reveals trenches, divots and protrusions,
even in the dust obscured regions that face away from Earth.
Eta Carinae
itself still undergoes violent outbursts,
a candidate to explode in a spectacular supernova
in the next few million years.