The ghostly Abell 21, often called the Medusa Nebula, drifts through the constellation Gemini about 1,500 light-years from Earth. Its nickname comes from the delicate network of glowing filaments that resemble the serpentine hair of the mythological Medusa. These intricate strands trace the expanding shell of gas expelled by a dying Sun-like star thousands of years ago. Because the nebula has grown so large over time—spanning nearly four light-years across—its light is extremely faint, making it a challenging but rewarding target for deep-sky imaging.
The wispy structure of Abell 21 reveals the complex interaction between the expanding stellar debris and the surrounding interstellar medium. Shock waves and turbulence stretch the gas into twisting filaments that glow softly in hydrogen and oxygen emission. At the center lies the faint stellar remnant, a hot white dwarf whose intense ultraviolet radiation energizes the surrounding gas and keeps the nebula shining. Over the next tens of thousands of years, the Medusa Nebula will continue to dissipate into space, gradually mixing its enriched material back into the galaxy and contributing to the raw ingredients for future generations of stars and planets.
The ghostly Abell 21, often called the Medusa Nebula, drifts through the constellation Gemini about 1,500 light-years from Earth. Its nickname comes from the delicate network of glowing filaments that resemble the serpentine hair of the mythological Medusa. These intricate strands trace the expanding shell of gas expelled by a dying Sun-like star thousands of years ago. Because the nebula has grown so large over time—spanning nearly four light-years across—its light is extremely faint, making it a challenging but rewarding target for deep-sky imaging.
The wispy structure of Abell 21 reveals the complex interaction between the expanding stellar debris and the surrounding interstellar medium. Shock waves and turbulence stretch the gas into twisting filaments that glow softly in hydrogen and oxygen emission. At the center lies the faint stellar remnant, a hot white dwarf whose intense ultraviolet radiation energizes the surrounding gas and keeps the nebula shining. Over the next tens of thousands of years, the Medusa Nebula will continue to dissipate into space, gradually mixing its enriched material back into the galaxy and contributing to the raw ingredients for future generations of stars and planets.