Return to Scale View
Logo

About News
Create With Us
About News Create With Us

Share This Page

Whatsapp

Whatsapp

Facebook

Facebook

Twitter

Twitter

Reddit

Reddit

Email

Email

Return to Scale View

How big is the Boomerang Nebula?

The Boomerang Nebula is 19 pétamètres

The Amazing Boomerang Nebula: The Coolest Place in the Universe

Have you ever wondered what the coolest place in the universe looks like? Well, wonder no more! Let’s journey 5,000 light-years away to meet the Boomerang Nebula, an extraordinary heavenly body with a temperature of only 1 Kelvin (−272.15 °C; −457.87 °F), making it the coldest known natural place in the cosmos.

What is the Boomerang Nebula?

The Boomerang Nebula, also known as the Bow Tie Nebula and catalogued as LEDA 3074547, is a protoplanetary nebula. It’s situated in the constellation Centaurus, far, far away from our home planet, Earth. In simpler terms, it’s a star system that’s still evolving and growing, thanks to the continuous outflow of gas from its core. This nebula got its unique name, the “Boomerang Nebula,” in 1980 from astronomers Keith Taylor and Mike Scarrott. They observed it with the Anglo-Australian telescope at the Siding Spring Observatory. Because of the lack of clarity, they only saw a slight asymmetry in the nebula’s lobes, which suggested a curved shape like a boomerang. Later in 1998, the Hubble Space Telescope was able to take detailed photographs of the nebula which revealed a more symmetric hourglass shape.

Size and Structure of the Boomerang Nebula

The Boomerang Nebula is a fascinating structure. Its core is a star in its late-stage life, which is shedding mass and emitting starlight that illuminates the dust in the nebula. This process causes the formation and development of the nebula. The grains of dust in the nebula are millimeter-scale, which mask portions of the nebula’s center, and most of the escaping visible light is in two opposing lobes. These lobes form a distinctive hourglass shape, which we can see from Earth. The gas that’s flowing out from the nebula’s core is moving outwards at an impressive speed of about 164 km/s, and it’s expanding rapidly as it moves out into space. This gas expansion results in the nebula’s unusually low temperature.

How Big is the Boomerang Nebula?

To really understand the enormity of the Boomerang Nebula, let’s compare it to something we know. The nebula is much bigger than our solar system. If we could travel at the speed of light (which is super-fast, about 299,792 kilometers per second), it would take us 5,000 years to reach the Boomerang Nebula from Earth! Now that’s really out of this world!

The Coolest Place in the Universe

In 1995, astronomers using the 15-metre Swedish-ESO Submillimetre Telescope in Chile measured the Boomerang Nebula’s temperature as one degree above absolute zero (-272.15 °C). Even the 2.7 K background glow from the Big Bang is warmer than the nebula. This makes the Boomerang Nebula the coldest place in the universe that we’ve found so far, even colder than any naturally occurring object.

The Boomerang Nebula: A Star in Transition

As of mid-2017, astronomers believe that the star at the center of the Boomerang Nebula is a dying red giant. This means that the nebula is a star system that’s evolving toward the planetary nebula phase. No matter how you look at it, the Boomerang Nebula is a fascinating part of our universe, a chilly celestial body that’s both beautiful and mysterious.

Newsletter! 🚀

Be the first to get exclusive offers and the latest news

Subscribe Now
Smaller By Category
Oort Cloud
The Oort Cloud is the outermost region of the solar system. Water ice, ammonia ice, methane ice and comets loosely fill the region. The boundary of the Oort Cloud is also the boundary of the Sun's gravitational pull.
Eskimo Nebula
The Eskimo Nebula was discovered in 1787 and is the result of a Sun-like star dying and expanding into space. It supposedly looks like a head in the hood of a parka. Another name is the Clownhead Nebula.
Light-Year
In one year, light travels about 9.46 trillion kilometers. This distance is known as a light-year. The light-year is commonly used for measuring astronomical distances.
Larger By Category
Ant Nebula
The Ant Nebula, which is also called Mz 3, is expanding 180,000 kilometers per hour. It resembles an ant, so much so that it is named after an ant. For more about ants, zoom in 18 orders of magnitude.
Ring Nebula
The Ring Nebula looks a lot like a ring. The old belief was that all planetary nebulae were ring-shaped like this one, but that is now known to not be true. There are other shapes planetary nebulae can be.
Parsec
Earth's movement around the Sun causes nearby stars to appear to move, called parallax. If a nearby star is perpendicular to the solar system and is exactly one parsec away, its parallax will be exactly one arcsecond (1/3600°). Parallax + Arcsec = Parsec
Logo

Scale Of Universe

Contact Discord

Stay up to date

Subscribe

© 2023 Scale of Universe. All rights reserved.