3D Print a Nebula at Home, Thanks to Nasa

Advertisement
By Indo Asian News Service | Updated: 12 July 2014 18:04 IST
Ever dreamed of holding a nebula in your hands? Thanks to Nasa, this may now be a reality as the first high-resolution three-dimensional model of the expanding cloud produced by a massive star's eruption is now available to all.

For this you need to download the plans that Nasa has made publicly available, feed them into your 3D-printing software, and play god by watching your very own Homunculus Nebula, a shell of gas and dust ejected during the star's mid-19th century eruption, form before your eyes.

Between 1838 and 1845, the massive binary system Eta Carinae underwent a period of unusual variability during which it briefly outshone Canopus, normally the second brightest star.

As a part of this event, which astronomers call the Great Eruption, a gaseous shell containing at least 10 and perhaps as much as 40 times the sun's mass was shot into space.

Advertisement

This material forms a twin-lobed dust filled cloud known as the Homunculus Nebula, which is now about a light-year long and continues to expand at more than 1.3 million mph (2.1 million km/h).

Advertisement

Wolfgang Steffen, astrophysicist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, recently created the first ever 3D-printed model of the Homunculus Nebula by using a software called Shape.

"One of the questions we set out to answer with this study is whether the Homunculus contains any imprint of the star's binary nature, since previous efforts to explain its shape have assumed that both lobes were more or less identical and symmetric around their long axis," team member Jose Groh, astronomer at Geneva University in Switzerland was quoted as saying.

Advertisement

"The new features strongly suggest that interactions between Eta Carinae's stars helped mould the Homunculus," Groh added.

To create their 3D model of the nebula that now measures one full light year across, the researchers took 92 different slices of it using the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope and its X-Shooter spectrograph.

Advertisement

They imaged near-infrared, visible and ultraviolet wavelengths, creating the most complete spectral map ever, according to Nasa.

That shape model was published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: 3D, 3D Printing, Homunculus Nebula, Nasa
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Astronomers Reveal Early Asymmetric Blast of a Supernova
  1. Goodbye June OTT Release Date Revealed: When, Where to Watch Kate Winslet, Helen Mirren-Starrer Online
  2. Raktabeej 2 Arrives on OTT Platforms This November: All You Need to Know About this Action-Thriller
  3. Usurae Now Streaming on OTT: Plot, Cast, and Everything Else About This Tamil-Language Romantic Drama
  4. Supernova’s First Moments Show Olive-Shaped Blast in Groundbreaking Observations
  5. Intense Solar Storm With Huge CMEs Forced Astronauts to Take Shelter on the ISS
  6. Nearby Super-Earth GJ 251 c Could Help Learn About Worlds That Once Supported Life, Astronomers Say
  7. James Webb Telescope May Have Spotted First Generation of Stars in the Universe
  8. Coming-of-Age Web Series CO-ED to Stream on OTT Soon: Know When, Where to Watch Online
  9. Leonardo DiCaprio’s One Battle After Another Now Available for Rent on Prime Video: All You Need to Know
  10. Ajay Devgn's De De Pyaar De 2 OTT Debut Timeline Tipped: All You Need to Know
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.