Today's APOD is beautifully detailed. As is often the case, I am uncertain as to what the colors mean.
Let's start by looking at what I think is the "true optical color" of the Cat's Eye nebula. I think that the picture at left by John Ambrose gives you a good idea of the probable aqua color of its OIII-dominated main "body". You can just make out a hint of the reddish, Hα-dominated "tails" right outside the main body.
The Cat's Eye nebula by John Ambrose.
Chandra X-ray portrait of the Cat's Eye Nebula at left,
and a Hubble picture at right.
The left panel of the picture at top right shows you the Chandra X-ray data of the Cat's Eye Nebula, and the other panel is a Hubble image of the Cat's Eye. In the Hubble picture, red means hydrogen, green means nitrogen and blue means oxygen. Note that today's APOD is partly based on a Chandra picture of the Cat's Eye.
I think that the picture at left is quite beautiful. The X-ray data is being shown as purple, which isn't a bad color choice, in my opinion. In today's APOD, the X-ray data is a lot harder to make out, and the central star is very orange for unclear reasons.
All right! Instead of me posting more and more pictures of the Cat's Eye, let me give you a number of links to some wildly colored images of this cosmic feline eyeball.
Here is a rosy-red one by NASA, ESA, Hubble, HLA and Raul Villaverde.
Here is a yellow-green one by ESA/Hubble.
Here is a green, purple and blue one by ESA/Hubble and James Long.
Here is one that skipped the blue part and just went for green and purple.
Here is one that is mostly sand-colored by Nordic Optical Telescope and Romano Corradi.
Here is a wild and crazy one by PixCove. And
here is a picture by someone who is going generally crazy, though in a beautiful way.
Finally, at right is a poster where you just pick your favorite Cat's Eye. Enjoy, I suppose!
Ann
Today's APOD is beautifully detailed. As is often the case, I am uncertain as to what the colors mean.
Let's start by looking at what I think is the "true optical color" of the Cat's Eye nebula. I think that the picture at left by John Ambrose gives you a good idea of the probable aqua color of its OIII-dominated main "body". You can just make out a hint of the reddish, Hα-dominated "tails" right outside the main body.
[float=left][img2]https://s22380.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/ngc6543-8min-final.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]The Cat's Eye nebula by John Ambrose.[/size][/c][/float] [float=right][img2]http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2001/1220/1220_xray_opt_side.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]Chandra X-ray portrait of the Cat's Eye Nebula at left,
and a Hubble picture at right.[/size][/c][/float]
The left panel of the picture at top right shows you the Chandra X-ray data of the Cat's Eye Nebula, and the other panel is a Hubble image of the Cat's Eye. In the Hubble picture, red means hydrogen, green means nitrogen and blue means oxygen. Note that today's APOD is partly based on a Chandra picture of the Cat's Eye.
[float=left][img2]https://live.staticflickr.com/8054/8076996734_7c4ed3bd9d_b.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]Official NASA interpretation of the Chandra + Hubble data.
Source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/nasamarshall/8076996734[/size][/c][/float]
I think that the picture at left is quite beautiful. The X-ray data is being shown as purple, which isn't a bad color choice, in my opinion. In today's APOD, the X-ray data is a lot harder to make out, and the central star is very orange for unclear reasons.
All right! Instead of me posting more and more pictures of the Cat's Eye, let me give you a number of links to some wildly colored images of this cosmic feline eyeball. [url=https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/1701/CatsEye_HubbleVillaVerde_960.jpg]Here[/url] is a rosy-red one by NASA, ESA, Hubble, HLA and Raul Villaverde. [url=http://cdn.spacetelescope.org/archives/images/screen/opo9501c.jpg]Here[/url] is a yellow-green one by ESA/Hubble. [url=https://www.spacetelescope.org/static/archives/fitsimages/medium/james_long_12.jpg]Here[/url] is a green, purple and blue one by ESA/Hubble and James Long. [url=http://www.astro.umd.edu/~jph/catseye.jpg]Here[/url] is one that skipped the blue part and just went for green and purple. [url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/ce/Cat%27s_Eye_Halo.jpg/1024px-Cat%27s_Eye_Halo.jpg]Here[/url] is one that is mostly sand-colored by Nordic Optical Telescope and Romano Corradi. [url=http://media.pixcove.com/J/8/0/Cat'S-Eye-Nebula-Planetary-Fog-Ngc-6543-Astronauti-2241.jpg]Here[/url] is a wild and crazy one by PixCove. And [url=http://fc07.deviantart.net/fs71/i/2010/172/5/0/Cat__s_eye_nebula_by_LMSP.jpg]here[/url] is a picture by someone who is going generally crazy, though in a beautiful way.
[float=right][img2]https://rlv.zcache.com/cats_eye_nebula_or_ngc_6543_views_zgos_poster-re570fd1b404842f2a3064155c92437fc_wh5_8byvr_307.jpg?rvtype=content[/img2][/float]
Finally, at right is a poster where you just pick your favorite Cat's Eye. Enjoy, I suppose!
Ann