Stingray Nebula

{{Short description|Planetary nebula in the constellation Ara}}

{{Planetary nebula

| image = 250px

| caption = Hubble Space Telescope photograph

| name = Stingray Nebula

| type = Planetary

| epoch = J2000

| ra = {{RA|17|16|21.071}}{{cite web |url=http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/sim-id?protocol=html&Ident=Stingray+Nebula |title=Results for Stingray Nebula |author=SIMBAD |author-link=SIMBAD |date=15 January 2007 |website=SIMBAD, Centre de Données Astronomiques de Strasbourg}}

| dec = {{DEC|-59|29|23.64}}

| dist_ly = 18,000

| dist_pc = 5,600

| appmag_v = 10.75

| size_v = 1″.6

| constellation = Ara

| radius_ly = 0.08

| absmag_v =

| notes =

| names = PN G331.3-12.1,
Hen 3-1357

}}

The Stingray Nebula (Hen 3-1357) is the youngest-known planetary nebula, having appeared in the 1980s.{{cite journal |last=Bobrowsky |first=M. |date=1994 |title=Narrowband HST imagery of the young planetary nebula Henize 1357 |journal=The Astrophysical Journal |volume=426 |pages=L47–L50 |bibcode=1994ApJ...426L..47B |bibcode-access=free |doi=10.1086/187336|doi-access=free }} The nebula is located in the direction of the southern constellation Ara (the Altar), and is located {{convert|5600|pc|ly|abbr=off|lk=on|order=flip}} away. Although it is some 130 times the size of the Solar System, the Stingray Nebula is only about one tenth the size of most other known planetary nebulae. The central star of the nebula is the fast-evolving star SAO 244567. Until the early 1970s, it was observed on Earth as a preplanetary nebula in which the gas had not yet become hot and ionized.

The image of the nebula shows how the older outer shells of gas are acting as a collimator for the more recent gas outflow from the central star—an important observation, as this process has not been well understood.{{citation needed|date=May 2021}}

History

Prior to the discovery of the nebula, its central star was known as He 3-1357, which Karl Gordon Henize classified as an A- or B-type emission-line star in 1976. It was observed in 1971 to be post-asymptotic giant branch B1 or B2 supergiant. Planetary nebula emission lines were identified in this star in 1989 by the International Ultraviolet Explorer.{{cite journal |bibcode=1995A&A...300L..25P |title=Fading and variations in the spectrum of the central star of the very young planetary nebula SAO 244567 (Hen 1357) |last1=Parthasarathy |first1=M. |last2=Garcia-Lario |first2=P. |last3=De Martino |first3=D. |last4=Pottasch |first4=S. R. |last5=Kilkenny |first5=D. |last6=Martinez |first6=P. |last7=Sahu |first7=K. C. |last8=Reddy |first8=B. E. |last9=Sewell |first9=B. T. |journal=Astronomy and Astrophysics |year=1995 |volume=300 }} As the nebula would be newly formed and very small, ground-based observations were not able to resolve it; so Bobrowsky observed it with the Hubble Space Telescope, discovering the nebula, which he named the "Stingray Nebula".

In 1993, M. Parthasarathy et al. looked at the history of measurements of the brightness of the central star, and concluded that it was fading in the optical region of the spectrum. It was given its variable star designation, V839 Arae, in 1997.

File:V839AraLightCurve.png light curve for V839 Arae (the central star of the Stingray Nebula) adapted from Schaefer and Edwards (2015)]]

In 1995 the central planetary nebula nucleus was observed as a DA white dwarf, having seemingly faded by a factor of three between 1987 and 1995. The white dwarf has an estimated mass of {{Solar mass|link=y|0.6}} and luminosity of {{Solar luminosity|link=y|3,000}}{{cite journal |last=Parthasarathy |first=M. |date=2000 |title=Birth and early evolution of planetary nebulae |journal=Bulletin of the Astronomical Society of India |volume=28 |pages=217–224 |bibcode= 2000BASI...28..217P |bibcode-access=free}} and has an observed companion star separated by 0.3 arcsecond. The mass of the nebula is estimated as {{Solar mass|0.015}}.

In 1998 Bobrowsky et al. described how the Hubble Space Telescope observations revealed a 17th-magnitude companion to the Stingray's 15th-magnitude central star.{{cite journal |last1=Bobrowsky |first1=M. |last2=Sahu |first2=K. C. |last3=Parthasarathy |first3=M. |last4=García-Lario |first4=P. |date=1998 |title=Birth and early evolution of a planetary nebula |journal=Nature |volume=392 |issue=6675 |pages=469–471 |bibcode=1998Natur.392..469B |doi=10.1038/33092 |arxiv=astro-ph/9804022|s2cid=4424808 }}

The central star is unusual in that it has brightened and faded over a period of 20 years. Its temperature went up by 40,000 °C. An explanation for this is that it has undergone a helium flash.{{cite web |url=http://phys.org/news/2016-09-astronomers-star-reborn.html |title=Astronomers observe star reborn in a flash |date=13 September 2016 |website=Phys.org |access-date=18 September 2016}}

In January 2021, NASA discovered that the nebula had been fading since the 1990s, when it reached its peak brightness.{{cite web |url=https://www.space.com/stingray-nebula-fading-fast-hubble-photos |title=The Stingray nebula is fading fast, Hubble telescope photos reveal |first=Samantha |last=Mathewson |date=8 January 2021 |website=Space.com |access-date=8 January 2021}} Previously photoionized, the positive ions of the nebula have been recombining with the electrons.{{cite journal|doi=10.3847/1538-4357/abcc61|title=The Decline and Fall of the Youngest Planetary Nebula |year=2021 |last1=Balick |first1=Bruce |last2=Guerrero |first2=Martín A. |last3=Ramos-Larios |first3=Gerardo |journal=The Astrophysical Journal |volume=907 |issue=2 |page=104 |arxiv=2009.01701 |bibcode=2021ApJ...907..104B |s2cid=228443528 |doi-access=free }} In a NASA statement a team member, Martín A. Guerrero of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía in Granada, Spain, said: "This is very, very dramatic, and very weird. What we're witnessing is a nebula's evolution in real time. In a span of years, we see variations in the nebula. We have not seen that before with the clarity we get with this view."{{cite web |url=http://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2020/hubble-captures-unprecedented-fading-of-stingray-nebula |title=Hubble Captures Unprecedented Fading of Stingray Nebula |first=Lynn |last=Jenner |date=30 November 2020 |website=NASA |access-date=8 January 2021}}

File:Fading_Stingray.jpg

{{clear}}

References

{{reflist|refs=

{{cite journal |last1=Schaefer |first1=Bradley E. |last2=Edwards |first2=Zachary I. |title=Photometry of the Stingray Nebula (V839 Ara) from 1889 TO 2015 across the Ionization of Its Planetary Nebula |journal=The Astrophysical Journal |date=October 2015 |volume=812 |issue=2 |page=133 |doi=10.1088/0004-637X/812/2/133 |url=https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2015ApJ...812..133S |access-date=12 June 2022|arxiv=1509.01202 |bibcode=2015ApJ...812..133S |s2cid=119249204 }}

{{cite journal |last1=Parthasarathy |first1=M. |last2=Garcia-Lario |first2=P. |last3=Pottasch |first3=S. R. |last4=Manchado |first4=A. |last5=Clavel |first5=J. |last6=de Martino |first6=D. |last7=van de Steene |first7=G. C. M. |last8=Sahu |first8=K. C. |title=SAO 244567 : a post-AGB star which has turned into a planetarey nebula within the last 40 years |journal=Astronomy and Astrophysics |date=January 1993 |volume=267 |pages=L19-L22 |bibcode=1993A&A...267L..19P |url=https://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/pdf/1993A%26A...267L..19P |access-date=25 November 2024}}

{{cite journal |last1=Kazarovets |first1=E. V. |last2=Samus |first2=N. N. |title=The 73rd Name-List of Variable Stars |journal=Information Bulletin on Variable Stars |date=April 1997 |volume=4471 |bibcode=1997IBVS.4471....1K |url=https://ibvs.konkoly.hu/pub/ibvs/4401/4471.pdf |access-date=25 November 2024}}

}}