An Infrared Imaging Study of the Bipolar Proto-Planetary Nebula IRAS 16594-4656
Bipolar and Multipolar Jets in Protoplanetary and Planetary Nebulae
Evolution from Spherical AGB Wind to Multipolar Outflow in Pre-planetary Nebula IRAS 17150-3224
Hints of point-symmetric structures in SN 1987A: The jittering jets explosion mechanism
Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of IRAS 17441-2411: A Case Study of a Bipolar Nebula with a Circumstellar Disk
Hubble Space Telescope V-Band Imaging of the Bipolar Proto-Planetary Nebula IRAS 17150-3224
Infrared Space Observatory Observations of IRAS 16594-4656: A New Proto-Planetary Nebula with a Strong 21 Micron Dust Feature
Near-infrared spectroscopy of (proto)-planetary nebulae: molecular hydrogen excitation as an evolutionary tracer
Possible Precession Motion in the Bipolar Proto-Planetary Nebula IRAS 17441-2411
Revealing the Mid-Infrared Emission Structure of IRAS 16594-4656 and IRAS 07027-7934
Shock emission in the bipolar post-AGB star IRAS 16594-4656
Spectropolarimetry and Radiative Transfer Modeling of Three Proto-Planetary Nebulae
The Discovery of Two New Bipolar Proto-Planetary Nebulae: IRAS 16594-4656 and IRAS 17245-3951
Instrument
WFPC2, WFPC2/PC
Temporal Coverage
1997-03-14T00:11:14Z/1997-05-22T17:27:54Z
Version
1.0
Mission Description
Launched in 1990, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope remains the premier UV and visible light telescope in orbit. With well over 1.6 million observations from 10 different scientific instruments, the ESA Hubble Science Archive is a treasure trove of astronomical data to be exploited.