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Home » Astronomers gaze into the ‘Crystal Ball Nebula’ and see a vision of our dying sun — Space photo of the week
Astronomers gaze into the ‘Crystal Ball Nebula’ and see a vision of our dying sun — Space photo of the week
Science

Astronomers gaze into the ‘Crystal Ball Nebula’ and see a vision of our dying sun — Space photo of the week

News RoomBy News RoomMay 31, 20260 ViewsNo Comments
Quick facts

What it is: NGC 1514, the Crystal Ball Nebula

Where it is: About 1,500 light-years from Earth, in the constellation Taurus

When it was shared: May 21, 2026

Hidden in the night sky, just above the hump of Taurus, is a giant crystal ball that shows both the past and the future.

This is the Crystal Ball Nebula (NGC 1514). To look at this orb’s gauzy, white light is to see 1,500 years into the past, since that’s about how long it’s taken the nebula’s light to reach Earth. But if you peer a bit deeper into the ball’s bright center, you’ll see the fiery ghost of a dead star system — and a vision of what awaits our stellar neighborhood about 5 billion years from now.

This view, captured with the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Gemini North telescope in Hawaii, is one of the clearest images ever taken of an object known to science for more than 200 years. Astronomer William Herschel (best known for discovering Uranus, as well as infrared radiation) was the first to spot the Crystal Ball Nebula, in 1790.


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Herschel called these types of objects “planetary nebulas,” because their spherical shapes looked like planets through his early telescopes. In reality, no planets are involved. Nebulas like these form when stars measuring between roughly one and eight times the mass of the sun reach the ends of their lives and shed their outer layers of gas into space, according to the European Space Agency. As the gas blooms outward, the star emits a final burst of radiation, charging the gas and making it glow — with reliably spectacular results.

While Herschel initially thought the Crystal Ball’s glow was powered by a distant cluster of stars, modern telescopes show a single, tight-knit binary star system at its center. These doomed siblings swirl around each other once every nine years, according to an NSF statement, making this the longest-period binary system within a planetary nebula. Their slow dance spews stellar wind asymmetrically through the gas cloud, carving the nebula into the lumpy, popcorn-ified shape we see today.

Zooming into NGC 1514 – YouTube


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Long after humanity has likely disappeared, the sun will face a similar fate. As it exhausts its nuclear fuel, our star will swell into a red giant — likely consuming Earth and the other inner planets in the process — before finally ejecting its outer layers into interstellar space.

If any intelligent alien astronomers happen to be watching from across the galaxy, they’ll see our solar system disappear inside a glorious planetary nebula and become a new landmark in their sky. Hopefully, they memorialize us with a suitably cool name.

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