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NASA's James Webb Space Telescope imaged a stunning supernova remnant and revealed details Hubble couldn't capture

Image of Crab Nebula taken by Hubble on left and by JWST on right.
One of the features JWST reveals so clearly in the Crab Nebula is the dense, spinning pulsar at the nebula's center. The pulsar isn't nearly as obvious in the Hubble image (on left). Hubble Image: NASA, ESA, J. Hester, A. Loll (Arizona State University); Webb Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, T. Temim (Princeton University).

  • NASA's James Webb Telescope has captured never-before-seen details of the Crab Nebula.
  • The new image reveals ghostly tendrils and the dense core of an exploded star in exquisite detail.
  • The Crab Nebula is the remains of an exploded star and is located 6,500 light years away. 
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NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has captured new views of a stunning nebula, revealing never-before-seen details.

A nebula is a cloud of gas and dust often formed from the debris of dying or exploding stars. These clouds are also cradles of new stars, with the gas and dust providing the building blocks for stellar formation.

Astronomers estimate there are tens of thousands of nebulae in the Milky Way galaxy, alone, and JWST recently turned its sights to one nearby: the Crab Nebula, located about 6,500 light-years away.

Studying the Crab Nebula in incredible detail

On Monday, NASA released a new image of the Crab Nebula, clearly showing a small white dot at its center. It's the heart of the Crab Nebula, called the Crab Pulsar.

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JWST Crab Nebula image with a red arrow pointing to the neutron star and a circle around it
The arrow points to the Crab Nebula's pulsar, which appears as a bright speck. NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Tea Temim (Princeton University)

About 1,000 years ago, astronomers recorded a supermassive star going supernova — exploding and spewing its blazing hot guts into space. But the dense core of that star remained intact and is the Crab Pulsar that lives at the center of the nebula today.

A pulsar is a rapidly rotating object that, in the case of the Crab Nebula, supercharges the gaseous material around it that JWST has revealed in stunning detail for the first time — something the Hubble Space Telescope could not show when it turned its sights on the Crab in 2005.

JWST reveals new features in the Crab Nebula

Hubble observes space mostly in the same type of light that we see — visible light. Therefore, Hubble was not capable of capturing the hazy, ghost-like, thin white wisps of charged particles seen by JWST, which recently viewed the nebula in infrared light. 

Side-by-side images of the Crab Nebula from the Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope with hazier white clouds showing up in the JWST image.
The Crab Nebula as shown by the Hubble Space Telescope in optical light (left) and the James Webb Space Telescope in infrared light (right). NASA, ESA, J. Hester, A. Loll (Arizona State University); NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, T. Temim (Princeton University)

These charged particles move around strong magnetic fields produced by the Crab Pulsar. They whip about at relativistic speeds, at a fraction of the speed of light and emit a powerful light that's sometimes used in X-ray imaging and is known as synchrotron radiation.

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The other, more colorful tendrils of gas and dust you see in the image are leftover bits of the dead star. For example, ionized sulfur looks reddish-orange, ionized iron appears blue, and dust appears greenish-yellow.

image of the colorful nebula in space
The Crab Nebula photographed by NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Tea Temim (Princeton University)

"Webb's sensitivity and spatial resolution allow us to accurately determine the composition of the ejected material, particularly the content of iron and nickel," Tea Temim, who led the team that used JWST's infrared instruments to image the Crab Nebula, told NASA. 

For the first time in 20 years, Hubble will have a new image of the Crab Nebula ready for comparison sometime in the next year, or so, per NASA.

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