GLOSSARY

v Total solar eclipse wows millions
v Partial lunar eclipse witnessed in the northeast
v Students, spot a new asteroid and name it!
v Regulus joins Moon & Mars
v A rare celestial treat
v Sky gazers gear up for Messier marathon
v Russia plans to destroy asteroid threatening earth
v Longest annular eclipse of the sun on Jan15, 2010
v Fog discovered on Saturn's largest moon Titan
v World’s largest telescope spells golden age of astronomy
v Celestial fireworks enthrall sky gazers
v Lucky Stars on 9.9.09
v Jupiters earth-sized moons
v Art of Living – an essential
v Eclipse predicts global events
v ASTROLOGY NEWS & EVENTS - International Conference on Astrology
v ASTROLOGY NEWS & EVENTS - New Moon reveals powerful possibilities



Planetary nebula seen through ESO telescope

NGC 5189, a chaotic-looking planetary nebula that lies about 550 parsecs away in the southern hemisphere constellation Musca, is a parallelogram-shaped cloud of glowing gas. The GMOS image of this nebula shows long streamers of gas, glowing dust clouds, and cometary knots pointing away from the central star. Its unruly appearance suggests some extraordinary action at the heart of this planetary nebula.

Discovered by John Herschel in 1835, it apparently has an ‘S’ shape when seen through the telescope, and is reminiscent of a barred spiral galaxy. Estimated to be at a distance of 3,000 light years from the earth, this spiral planetary nebula has an oriental twist and is similar in appearance to a Chinese dragon. These cosmic fireworks form the last swansong of a dying star which is seen to release gas that forms an inner ring in the nebula.

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