Double Bang Kicks Off the Year for NASA Telescopes

Double Bang Kicks Off the Year for NASA Telescopes

A colorful, festive ‌image​ shows different types ​of light ‌containing the remains of not one, ​but at least two exploded stars. This supernova remnant is known as 30 Doradus B (30 Dor​ B for ‌short) and is part of a larger region of space where stars have been continuously forming for the past ⁤8 to ⁤10 million years. It is a complex landscape of dark clouds of gas,⁢ young stars, high-energy shocks, and superheated ‌gas, ⁤located 160,000 light-years away⁤ from Earth in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small satellite ⁣galaxy of the Milky Way.

A team of‍ astronomers led by Wei-An Chen from the National ‍Taiwan University in ⁤Taipei, Taiwan,​ have used over two million⁣ seconds​ of Chandra observing time of 30 Dor B and⁤ its surroundings to analyze the region. They found a faint shell of X-rays ‍that extends about 130⁤ light-years across. (For context, the nearest star to the sun is about ⁢four light-years away). The Chandra data also reveals that⁣ 30 Dor B contains winds ‍of particles blowing away from a pulsar, creating what is known as a pulsar wind⁢ nebula.

The paper led by Wei-An Chen ⁤describing these results was ⁢recently published⁤ in the Astronomical Journal. The co-authors of​ the paper are Chuan-Jui ⁤Li, You-Hua ⁣Chu, Shutaro Ueda, Kuo-Song⁤ Wang,‍ Sheng-Yuan Liu, all from the Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics; Academia Sinica, in Taipei, ​Taiwan, ‌and Bo-An Chen from National Taiwan University.

Taking the Chandra data ⁤together​ with ‍data ‍from Hubble​ and other telescopes, the researchers‌ determined ‌that no ​single supernova explosion could explain what is being seen. Both the pulsar and the bright X-rays seen in⁢ the center of 30 Dor B likely resulted from a supernova explosion ‍after the collapse⁤ of⁢ a massive star about 5,000 years ago. The larger, faint shell of X-rays, however, is too big to have resulted from the‍ same ‍supernova.

Instead, the team thinks that at least two supernova explosions ‌took place in 30 Dor B, with the X-ray shell produced by another supernova more than 5,000 years ago. It‌ is also ⁤quite possible that even more happened in the past.

2024-01-04 00:00:04
Post from phys.org rnrn

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