CELESTIAL FIREWORKS
Resembling the puffs of smoke and sparks from a
summer fireworks
display in this image from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope,
these
delicate filaments are actually sheets of debris
from a stellar
explosion in a neighboring galaxy. Hubble's target
was a supernova
remnant within the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC),
a nearby, small
companion galaxy to the Milky Way visible from the
southern
hemisphere.
Denoted N 49, or DEM L 190, this remnant is from
a massive star
that died in a supernova blast whose light would
have reached
Earth thousands of years ago. This filamentary material
will
eventually be recycled into building new generations
of stars in
the LMC. Our own Sun and planets are constructed
from similar
debris of supernovae that exploded in the Milky
Way billions of
years ago.
This seemingly delicate structure also harbors
a very powerful spinning neutron star that may be
the central remnant from the initial blast. It is
quite common for the core of an exploded supernova
star to become a spinning neutron star (also called
a pulsar - because of the regular pulses of energy
from the rotational spin) after the immediate shedding
of the star's outer layers. In the case of N 49,
not only is the neutron star spinning at a rate
of once every 8 seconds, it also has a super-strong
magnetic field a thousand trillion times stronger
than Earth's magnetic field. This places this star
into the exclusive class of objects called "magnetars."
On March 5, 1979, this neutron star displayed an
historic gamma-ray
burst episode that was detected by numerous Earth-orbiting
satellites. Gamma rays have a million or more times
the energy of
visible light photons. The Earth's atmosphere protects
us by
blocking gamma rays that originate from outer space.
The neutron
star in N 49 has had several subsequent gamma-ray
emissions, and is
now recognized as a "soft gamma-ray repeater."
These objects are a
peculiar class of stars producing gamma rays that
are less energetic
than those emitted by most gamma-ray bursters.
The neutron star in N 49 is also emitting X rays,
whose energies are
slightly less than that of soft gamma rays. High-resolution
X-ray
satellites have resolved a point source near the
center of N 49,
the likely X-ray counterpart of the soft gamma-ray
repeater. Diffuse
filaments and knots throughout the supernova remnant
are also visible
in X ray. The filamentary features visible in the
optical image
represent the blast wave sweeping through the ambient
interstellar
medium and nearby dense molecular clouds.
Today, N 49 is the target of investigations led
by Hubble astronomers
You-Hua Chu from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
and
Rosa Williams from the University of Massachusetts.
Members of this
science team are interested in understanding whether
small cloudlets
in the interstellar medium of the LMC may have a
marked effect on the
physical structure and evolution of this supernova
remnant.
The Hubble Heritage image of N 49 is a color representation
of data
taken in July 2000, with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary
Camera 2. Color
filters were used to sample light emitted by sulfur
([S II]), oxygen
([O III]), and hydrogen (H-alpha). The color image
has been superimposed
on a black-and-white image of stars in the same
field also taken with Hubble.
Credit: NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team
(STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: Y.-H. Chu (UIUC), S. Kulkarni (Caltech)
and R. Rothschild (UCSD)
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