Rahul Sharma (Editor)

M2 9

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Right ascension
  
17 05 37.952

Distance
  
2,100 ly (650 pc) ly

Radius
  
0.7 ly (0.2 pc) ly

Constellation
  
Declination
  
−10° 08′ 34.58″

Apparent dimensions (V)
  
115″ × 18″

Magnitude
  
14.7

Apparent magnitude (V)
  
14.7

M2-9 APOD M29 Wings of a Butterfly Nebula 2013 Sep 15 Starship

Notable features
  
Similar
  
NGC 6302, Cat's Eye Nebula, Mz 3, Engraved Hourglass Nebula, Helix Nebula

Minkowski 2-9, abbreviated M2-9 (and also known as Minkowski's Butterfly, the Wings of a Butterfly Nebula or just Butterfly Nebula, and Twin Jet Nebula) is a planetary nebula that was discovered by Rudolph Minkowski in 1947. It is located about 2,100 light-years away from Earth in the direction of the constellation Ophiuchus. This bipolar nebula takes the peculiar form of twin lobes of material that emanate from a central star. Astronomers have dubbed this object as the Twin Jet Nebula because of the jets believed to cause the shape of the lobes. Its form also resembles the wings of a butterfly. The nebula was imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope in the 1990s.

M2-9 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The primary component of the central binary is the hot core of a star that reached the end of its main-sequence life cycle, ejected most of its outer layers and became a red giant, and is now contracting into a white dwarf. It is believed to have been a sun-like star early in its life. The second, smaller star of the binary orbits very closely and may even have been engulfed by the other's expanding stellar atmosphere with the resulting interaction creating the nebula. Astronomers theorize that the gravity of one star pulls some of the gas from the surface of the other and flings it into a thin, dense disk extending into space. Such a disk can successfully account for the jet-exhaust-like appearance of M2-9.

M2-9 Hubble Sees Supersonic Exhaust From Nebula ESAHubble

The nebula has inflated dramatically due to a fast stellar wind, blowing out into the surrounding disk and inflating the large, wispy hourglass-shaped wings perpendicular to the disk. These wings produce the butterfly appearance when seen in projection. The outer shell is estimated to be about 1,200 years old (Schwarz et al. 1997).

M2-9 PN M29 YouTube
M2-9 APOD 2005 June 12 M2 9 Wings of a Butterfly Nebula

M2-9 Planetary nebula M29 Chalmers University of Technology

References

M2-9 Wikipedia