NGC 5189 explained

NGC 5189 (Gum 47, IC 4274, nicknamed Spiral Planetary Nebula) is a planetary nebula in the constellation Musca. It was discovered by James Dunlop on 1 July 1826, who catalogued it as Δ252.[1] For many years, well into the 1960s, it was thought to be a bright emission nebula. It was Karl Gordon Henize in 1967 who first described NGC 5189 as quasi-planetary based on its spectral emissions.

Seen through the telescope it seems to have an S shape, reminiscent of a barred spiral galaxy. The S shape, together with point-symmetric knots in the nebula, have for a long time hinted to astronomers that a binary central star is present.[2] The Hubble Space Telescope imaging analysis showed that this S shape structure is indeed two dense low-ionization regions: one moving toward the north-east and another one moving toward the south-west of the nebula,[3] which could be a result of a recent outburst from the central star. Observations with the Southern African Large Telescope have finally found a white dwarf companion in a 4.04 day orbit around the rare low-mass Wolf-Rayet type central star of NGC 5189.[4] NGC 5189 is estimated to be 546 parsecs[5] or 1,780 light years away from Earth. Other measurements have yielded results up to 900 parsecs (~3000 light-years).[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Classic Deep-Sky and Double Stars : NGC 5189 (Mus) http://www.southastrodel.com/NGC5189.htm Southern Astronomical Delights
  2. Phillips J. P. . Reay N. K.. 1983. Ansae and the precession of central stars in planetary nebulae - The cases of NGC 5189 and NGC 6826. Astronomy and Astrophysics. 117. 33–37. 1983A&A...117...33P.
  3. Danehkar . A. . Karovska . M. . Maksym . W.P. . Montez Jr. . R. . 2018 . Mapping Excitation in the Inner Regions of the Planetary Nebula NGC 5189 using HST WFC3 Imaging . Astrophys. J. . 852 . 2 . 87 . 10.3847/1538-4357/aa9e8c . 2018ApJ...852...87D. 1711.11111 . 119365610 . free .
  4. Manick R. . Miszalski B.. McBride V.. 2015. A radial velocity survey for post-common-envelope Wolf-Rayet central stars of planetary nebulae: first results and discovery of the close binary nucleus of NGC 5189. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 448. 2. 1789–1806. 10.1093/mnras/stv074. 2015MNRAS.448.1789M. 1501.03373 . 118600965.
  5. NGC 5189 . 2012-12-21.
  6. SABIN L. . 4 . VAZQUEZ R. . LOPEZ J.A. . GARCIA-DIAZ M.T. . RAMOS-LARIOS G.. 2012. The filamentary multi-polar planetary nebula NGC 5189. Rev. Mex. Astron. Astrofís.. 48. 165–76. 1203.1297 . 2012RMxAA..48..165S .