Supernova birth seen for first time by astronomers
May 22nd, 2008 - 1:06 pm ICT by adminWashington, May 22 (ANI): Astronomers have observed the death of a star for the first time in the form of a stellar explosion, which is also the first detection of the birth of a supernova.
Supernovae are the explosions of massive stars that are more than 8 times the mass of the Sun, whose cores run out of nuclear fuel and collapse in on themselves to form a neutron star or a black hole. In the process, they launch a powerful shock wave that blows up the star.
Until now, observations of these objects have been of the aftermath, typically several days after the initial explosion, not the first instance of death.
Now, using NASAs orbiting Swift telescope, Carnegie-Princeton University fellows Alicia Soderberg and Edo Berger detected an extremely luminous blast of X-rays released by a explosion of a supernova, dubbed as SN 2008D.
Though they didnt know it, they had just become the first astronomers to have caught a star in the act of exploding.
Astrophysicists have predicted nearly 4 decades ago that the first sign of a supernova would be an X-ray blast, but none had been witnessed before Soderbergs and Bergers Swift observations.
A typical supernova occurs when the core of a vast star runs out of nuclear fuel and collapses under its own gravity to form an ultra-dense object known as a neutron star.
The next activity is what the scientists were able to see for themselves - the newborn neutron star first compresses then rebounds, triggering a shock wave that plows through the stars gaseous outer layers and rips the star apart.
Using the most powerful radio, optical, and X-ray telescopes on the ground and in space we were able to observe the evolution of the explosion right from the start, said Berger. This eventually confirmed that the big X-ray blast marked the birth of a supernova, he added.
According to Roger Chevalier, the W.H. Vanderbilt Professor of Astronomy at the University of Virginia, These are the earliest observations of light from a supernova after the central collapse that initiated the explosion.
This first instance of catching the X-ray signature of stellar death is going to help us fill in a lot of gaps about the properties of massive stars, the birth of neutron stars and black holes, and the impact of supernovae on their environments, said Neil Gehrels, principal investigator of the Swift satellite.
We also now know what X-ray pattern to look for. Hopefully we will be able to find many more supernovae at this critical moment, he added. (ANI)
- Space observatory briefly blinded by record-breaking x-ray blast - Jul 15, 2010
- New evidence on what triggered ancient Supernovas - Apr 27, 2011
- NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory finds youngest nearby black hole - Nov 16, 2010
- NASA finds 30-yr-old 'youngest' nearby black hole - Nov 16, 2010
- Superfluid found in neutron star's core - Feb 24, 2011
- Newborn black holes can give an extra boost to exploding stars - Jan 28, 2010
- Supernova remnant erupts in enormous flares - May 12, 2011
- 'Magnetar' discovery challenges stellar evolution, black hole theory - Aug 19, 2010
- NASA finds giant ring of black holes - Feb 10, 2011
- Chandra images show result of star formation on overdrive - Jan 14, 2011
- Dazzling star explosion blinds satellite - Jul 16, 2010
- Astronomers detect black hole farther away than any other previously known - Jan 27, 2010
- Supercomputer solves gamma-ray burst mystery - Apr 08, 2011
- Crab Nebula shoots off surprising flares - Jan 07, 2011
- New Hubble observations reveal composition of 'star guts' pouring out - Sep 04, 2010
Tags: alicia soderberg, astronomers, astrophysicists, collapses, compresses, death of a star, dense object, first instance, initial explosion, mass of the sun, massive stars, neutron star, nuclear fuel, outer layers, princeton university, shock wave, stellar explosion, university fellows, x ray, x rays