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|  |  |  |  | | | Cat's Eye Nebula (NGC 6543) 12 November 2004
 | | The so-called Cat's Eye Nebula, formally catalogued NGC 6543 and seen here in this detailed view from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, is one of the most complex planetary nebulae ever seen in space. A planetary nebula forms when Sun-like stars gently eject their outer gaseous layers to form bright nebulae with amazing twisted shapes.
Hubble first revealed NGC 6543's surprisingly intricate structures including concentric gas shells, jets of high-speed gas and unusual shock-induced knots of gas in 1994.
This new image, taken with Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), reveals the full beauty of a bull's-eye pattern of eleven or more concentric rings, or shells, around the Cat’s Eye. Each ‘ring’ is actually the edge of a spherical bubble seen projected onto the sky - which is why it appears bright along its outer edge.
High resolution version (JPG format) 125 Kb
High resolution version (TIFF format) 2569 Kb
Acknowledgment: R. Corradi (Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes, Spain) and Z. Tsvetanov (NASA).
Credits: ESA, NASA, HEIC and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA) |  |  |  |  |
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|  | More about... Hubble overviewRelated articles Why are things in space the shape that they are?Saturn Nebula (NGC 7009)Cone Nebula (NGC 2264)Spirograph Nebula (IC 418)The Hourglass Nebula (MyCn-18)Lagoon Nebula (NGC 6523 or M8)
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