PMR1, Cranium Nebula JWST(NIRCAM)
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PMR1 Exposed Cranium Nebula JWST
The Exposed Cranium nebula (also known as PMR 1) is a planetary nebula located roughly 5,000 light years away from Earth in the constellation Vela. Its name “exposed cranium” comes from the nebulas describe the uncanny resemblance to a brain located in a transparent skulll. This appearance is made possible by a dark lane running vertically down the middle of the nebula.The nebula is formed from a large and hot dying star ejected material out into space. It is unknown whether this star is massive enough to undergo supernova or just shed its outer shell of material like our Sun will do. The nebula appears to have distinct regions that capture different phases of its evolution — an outer shell of gas that was blown off first and consists mostly of hydrogen, and an inner cloud with more structure that contains a mix of different gases.
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope captured the image using its NIRCAM(near infrared camera) in March 2025. The image is in false color with Red from its 4.7u filter, Green from the 4.44u filter, and Blue from the 1.87n filter. Webb’s resolution shows that this lane could be related to an outburst or outflow from the central star, which typically occurs as twin jets burst out in opposite directions.
While there is still much to be understood about this nebula, it’s clear that it is being created by a star near the end of its fuel-burning “life.” In their end stages, stars expel their outer layers. It’s a dynamic and fairly fast process, in cosmic terms. Webb has captured a moment in this star’s decline. What ultimately happens will depend on the mass of the star, which is yet to be determined. If it’s massive enough, it will explode in a supernova. A less massive Sun-like star will continue to shed layers until only its core remains as a dense white dwarf, which will cool off over eons.
Optics: James Webb Space Telescope(JWST)
Mount: JWST
Camera:NIRCAM(JWST Near Infrared Camera)
Filters:NIRCAM 470w,444w,187n
Dates/Times: March 30,2025
Location: Lagrange Point 2 orbit, ~1 million miles from Earth
Exposure Details: NIRCAM 666s,1332s(187n)
Acquisition: Downloeaded from the MAST
Processing: Maximdl was used to stretch and align the data from the three filters and create initial three wavelength color images with 470w-R, 444w-G, 187n-B. Image processing done in PS 2025. The processing of the 187n image was difficult because of presence of artifacts that calibration did not remove. The AI features of PS Camera Raw were used to minimize these effects. Remaining are the star burst features of the bright stars which is due to the 18 segment JWST mirror.