Bravo !!
A Two Thumbs Up !! on the description accompanying the photo !
I appreciate the distance (700 LY est.) and the diameter of the object (2 LY dia. est.). Thanks very much for those, they always add substance to the photo.
Now here's where I'd like to steer the direction of the discussion:
". . .the nebula's central star itself is immersed in a surprisingly bright infrared glow."
If it's "surprising", then your models are incorrect to begin with. This should be your first clue.
2nd; what else can cause infrared glow ? And why are those mechanisms discarded from study ?
In regards to this science paper:
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/astro-ph/pdf/ ... 2296v1.pdf
I do not agree with the authors' assumption of following the argument of 'dust disks' as the cause of infrared glow.
"The excess emission from the star most likely originates from a dust disk with blackbody temperatures of 90–130 K. Assuming a simple optically thin debris disk model, the dust is distributed in a ring between 35 and 150 AU from the central star, possibly arising from collisions of Kuiper-Belt-like Objects or the break-up of comets from an Oort-like cloud that have survived from the post-main-sequence evolution of the central star."
Here's another assumption they made:
"If the blackbody radiator is
heated by the central star WD 2226−210, of which the effective temperature is 110,000 K and radius is 0.024 R⊙, it would have to be 41–91 AU from the star."
[my bolding of the text]
Why does the 'excess infrared' need be 'heated by the star' for its genesis ?
There are other things that can cause infrared radiation, why ingnore those mechanisms ?
No disrespect to this paper's authors, but they would do well to think outside the box on their next papers. !
Kovil