QUICK FACTS

What it is: The Egg Nebula (CRL 2688), a planetary nebula

Where it is: 1,000 light-years away, in the constellation Cygnus

When it was shared: Feb. 10, 2026

A searchlight shines through concentric circles of fresh stardust ejected by a dying star in this beautiful new image of the Egg Nebula. The dramatic scene, captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, also provides tantalizing evidence of exactly what happens to sunlike stars as they reach the end of their lives.

Helix Nebula, the Stingray Nebula and the Butterfly Nebula. But the Egg Nebula is one of the only places where astronomers can see what happens as a star exhausts its hydrogen and helium fuel and begins to shed its outer layers into space. The short lifespan of pre-planetary nebulas means that very few exist at any given time in cosmic history, and they’re extremely dim.

Hubble has peered at the Egg Nebula before — in 1997, 2003 and 2012 — and it was the latter data, combined with new data, that created this new image. In this early stage of becoming a planetary nebula, the light in the Egg Nebula comes from its star, which expelled a dense disk of dust just a few hundred years ago.

Now blocked by dust, light from the star escapes through polar openings, forming twin beams. The concentric arcs and symmetry are evidence that the star regularly “burps” out mass, and they rule out the possibility of a chaotic supernova explosion.

A bright blue streak of light is seen covering a series of bright stars in this dark deep space image. A white box surrounds the blue shape
Webb and Chandra’s deepest views

The James Webb telescope and Chandra X-ray Observatory captured a galaxy cluster in the making when the universe was only one billion years old.

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