A "cannonball pulsar" is a star (or stellar remnant) ejected from its original location. All we're seeing in this nebula is a shock front created by stellar winds... and I see no reason to assume it will be perfectly spherical, given that stars can and do throw off particles non-isometrically.VictorBorun wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:57 pmmy guess was that the nose is a dissipating track of massive fast-moving body, something like “Cannonball Pulsar” only of smaller mass and greater sizeChris Peterson wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 1:08 pmWhat momentum is not being conserved? This isn't a planetary nebula, it is a shock front created by winds coming off a star. Does a CME from the Sun require a matching one from the opposite hemisphere to conserve any momentum?VictorBorun wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 7:13 am An anti-nose or a few ones are needed to conserve the total momentum without an invisible party
Also, what we're seeing here isn't material from the star, but surrounding material being ionized by particles from the star. So the shape of the nebula is determined in part by the density and density variations of the interstellar medium in that region.