Chandra Celebrates 15th Anniversary: Crab Nebula
In 1054 AD, Chinese astronomers and others around the world noticed a new
bright object in the sky. This “new star” was, in fact, the supernova explosion
that created what is now called the Crab Nebula. At the center of the Crab
Nebula is an extremely dense, rapidly rotating neutron star left behind by the
explosion. The neutron star, also known as a pulsar, is spewing out a blizzard
of high-energy particles, producing the expanding X-ray nebula seen by Chandra.
In this new image, lower-energy X-rays from Chandra are red, medium energy
X-rays are green, and the highest-energy X-rays are blue.
Image credit: NASA/CXC/SAO
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› Chandra on Flickr
› View all Chandra 15th anniversary photos
› Read more about Chandra's 15th anniversary
› Chandra on Flickr
NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory Celebrates 15th
Anniversary
In commemoration of the 15th anniversary of NASA’s Chandra X-ray
Observatory, four newly processed images of supernova remnants dramatically
illustrate Chandra’s unique ability to explore high-energy processes in the
cosmos (see the accompanying press
release).
The images of the Tycho and G292.0+1.8 supernova remnants show how Chandra
can trace the expanding debris of an exploded star and the associated shock
waves that rumble through interstellar space at speeds of millions of miles per
hour. The images of the Crab Nebula and 3C 58 show how extremely dense, rapidly
rotating neutron stars produced when a massive star explodes can create clouds
of high-energy particles light years across that glow brightly in X-rays.
Tycho:
More than four centuries after Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe first
observed the supernova that bears his name, the supernova remnant it created is
now a bright source of X-rays. The supersonic expansion of the exploded star
produced a shock wave moving outward into the surrounding interstellar gas, and
another, reverse shock wave moving back into the expanding stellar debris. This
Chandra image of Tycho reveals the dynamics of the explosion in exquisite
detail. The outer shock has produced a rapidly moving shell of extremely
high-energy electrons (blue), and the reverse shock has heated the expanding
debris to millions of degrees (red and green). There is evidence from the
Chandra data that these shock waves may be responsible for some of the cosmic
rays – ultra-energetic particles – that pervade the Galaxy and constantly
bombard the Earth.
G292.0+1.8:
At a distance of about 20,000 light years, G292.0+1.8 is one of
only three supernova remnants in the Milky Way known to contain large amounts of
oxygen. These oxygen-rich supernovas are of great interest to astronomers
because they are one of the primary sources of the heavy elements (that is,
everything other than hydrogen and helium) necessary to form planets and people.
The X-ray image from Chandra shows a rapidly expanding, intricately structured,
debris field that contains, along with oxygen (yellow and orange), other
elements such as magnesium (green) and silicon and sulfur (blue) that were
forged in the star before it exploded.
The
Crab Nebula: In 1054 AD, Chinese astronomers and others around the
world noticed a new bright object in the sky. This “new star” was, in fact, the
supernova explosion that created what is now called the Crab Nebula. At the
center of the Crab Nebula is an extremely dense, rapidly rotating neutron star
left behind by the explosion. The neutron star, also known as a pulsar, is
spewing out a blizzard of high-energy particles, producing the expanding X-ray
nebula seen by Chandra. In this new image, lower-energy X-rays from Chandra are
red, medium energy X-rays are green, and the highest-energy X-rays are blue.
3C58:
3C58 is the remnant of a supernova observed in the year 1181 AD by
Chinese and Japanese astronomers. This new Chandra image shows the center of
3C58, which contains a rapidly spinning neutron star surrounded by a thick ring,
or torus, of X-ray emission. The pulsar also has produced jets of X-rays
blasting away from it to both the left and right, and extending trillions of
miles. These jets are responsible for creating the elaborate web of loops and
swirls revealed in the X-ray data. These features, similar to those found in the
Crab, are evidence that 3C58 and others like it are capable of generating both
swarms of high-energy particles and powerful magnetic fields. In this image,
low, medium, and high-energy X-rays detected by Chandra are red, green, and blue
respectively.
Image credit: NASA/CXC/SAO
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@Hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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2 comentarios:
Voldo, aún no está claro sobre los agujeros negros, según los científicos de la NASA, es una concentración muy poderosa de energía concentrada al centro de las galaxias, que "devora" millones de estrellas, el Observatorio Espacial Hubble, los califica como concentración de masa tan poderosa que ni siquiera los rayos de la luz se salva de su poder... y alguien dijo que esa masa de estrellas "comidas" van un Universo paralelo que está debajo del agujero negro... en fin hay mucho para especular...
los famosos agujeros negros, comiendose a la luz... carajo hace 4500 millones de años y solo nos falta para que termine este mundo cruel.... otros 4500 millones mas... pregunta del millon. --- lllegaremos? jajajaj
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