Hubblesite: Fading Supernova Is Producing a Spectacular New Light Show (Photo)
February 19, 2004 (Clearwisdom.net) Seventeen years ago, astronomers spotted the brightest stellar explosion ever
seen since the one observed by Johannes Kepler 400 years ago. Called SN 1987A,
the titanic supernova explosion blazed with the power of 100,000,000 suns for
several months following its discovery on Feb. 23, 1987. Although the supernova
itself is now a million times fainter than 17 years ago, a new light show in the
space surrounding it is just beginning. This image, taken Nov. 28, 2003 by the Advanced Camera for Surveys aboard
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, shows many bright spots along a ring of gas, like
pearls on a necklace. These cosmic "pearls" are being produced as a
supersonic shock wave unleashed during the explosion slams into the ring at more
than a million miles per hour. The collision is heating the gas ring, causing
its innermost regions to glow. Astronomers detected the first "hot spot" in 1996, but now they see
dozens of them all around the ring. The temperature of the flares surges from a
few thousand degrees to a million degrees Fahrenheit. Individual hot spots
cannot be seen from ground-based telescopes. Only Hubble can resolve them. And, more hot spots are coming. In the next few years, the entire ring will
be ablaze as it absorbs the full force of the crash. The glowing ring is
expected to become bright enough to illuminate the star's surroundings, thus
providing astronomers with new information on how the star ejected material
before the explosion. The elongated and expanding object in the middle of the ring is debris from
the supernova blast. The glowing debris is being heated by radioactive elements,
principally titanium 44, that were created in the supernova explosion. The
debris will continue to glow for many decades. The ring, about a light-year across, already existed when the star exploded.
Astronomers believe the star shed the ring about 20,000 years before the
supernova blast. The violent death of a star 20 times more massive than the Sun, called a
supernova, created this stellar drama. The star actually exploded about 160,000
years ago, but it has taken that long for its light to reach Earth. The
supernova resides in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a nearby small galaxy that is a
satellite or our Milky Way galaxy. Since its launch in 1990, the Hubble telescope has watched the supernova
drama unfold, taking periodic snapshots of the gradually fading ring. Now, the
orbiting observatory will continue to monitor the ring as it brightens from this
collision. http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archive/releases/2004/09/image/a
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net

