Yesterday, NASA's Cassini imaging team brought us a rare view of a backlit Saturn to commemorate the holidays. Today, the Agency's Hubble Space Telescope celebrates the season with a gorgeous "cosmic holiday ornament."

Stop what you're doing and look at this. Banded, backlit and beautiful, this verdant view of Saturn

Via HUBBLESITE:

Tis the season for holiday decorating and tree-trimming. Not to be left out, astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have photographed a festive-looking nearby planetary nebula called NGC 5189.

Planetary nebulae represent the final brief stage in the life of a medium-sized star like our Sun. While consuming the last of the fuel in its core, the dying star expels a large portion of its outer envelope. This material then becomes heated by the radiation from the stellar remnant and radiates, producing glowing clouds of gas that can show complex structures, as the ejection of mass from the star is uneven in both time and direction.

A spectacular example of this beautiful complexity is seen in the bluish lobes of NGC 5189. Most of the nebula is knotty and filamentary in its structure. As a result of the mass-loss process, the planetary nebula has been created with two nested structures, tilted with respect to each other, that expand away from the center in different directions.