Figure 13-16 RIVUXG Shells of Gas Around SN 1987A (a) Intense radiation from the supernova explosion caused three rings of gas surrounding SN 1987A to glow in this Hubble Space Telescope image. This gas was ejected from the star 20,000 years before the star detonated. All three rings lie in parallel planes. The inner ring is about 1.3 ly across. The white and colored spots are unrelated stars. (b) When the progenitor star of SN 1987A was still a red supergiant, a slowly moving wind from the star filled the surrounding space with a thin gas. When the star contracted into a blue supergiant, it produced a faster-moving stellar wind. The interaction between the fast and slow winds somehow caused gases to pile up along an hourglass-shaped shell surrounding the star. The burst of ultraviolet radiation from the supernova ionized the gas in the rings, causing the rings to glow. The supernova itself, at the center of the hourglass, glows because of energy released from radioactive decay.