Located at the boundaries of Circinus and Lups stands this intriguing southern gem with a bipolar shape.
By 1996 there were no studies explicitly dedicated to this emission nebula, therefore Italian and Spanish astronomers Corradi; Villaver; Mampaso and Perinotto dedicated observations aiming to establishing its exact nature. The images and spectra acquired on that occasion confirmed without a doubt that the object was indeed a planetary nebula.
Following the nomenclature rules used in astronomy, the four astronomers proposed to call it PN G321.6+02.2, name in which the prefix ‘PN’ stands for planetary nebula, while the numbers indicate its position in the sky, expressed with the galactic coordinate system. However the name that remained was the one obtained from the initials of the surnames of the four authors, hence the nebula is better known as CVMP 1.
The hourglass shape suggests that a large-mass AGB (asymptotic giant branch) star produced during some kind of interaction with a binary companion. The interactions that cause such morphology has not yet been clearly understood. CVMP 1 has a linear extension of 13 light years. The remarkable extension of the nebula and the rarefaction of the gases of which it is composed, tell us that it is a very ancient planetary nebula. Corradi’s group calculated an age greater than 12,000 years, assuming a gas expansion rate of less than 100 km/s along the polar axis of the nebula
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