Scientists have probed the remains of a star that died in a violent supernovaand discovered that its shockwave continued reverberating through space, hundreds of years later.
That shockwave eventually reached interstellar space, the medium that fills regions between stars. Researchers used the James Webb Space Telescope, a collaboration of NASAand its European and Canadian counterparts, to find that the ancient pulse, like a cosmic flashlight, had lit up never-before-seen details in the otherwise mysterious material.
"We see layers like an onion," said Josh Peek of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, a member of the research team, in a statement. "We think every dense, dusty region that we see, and most of the ones we don’t see, look like this on the inside. We just have never been able to look inside them before."
SEE ALSO: Webb telescope exposes secrets of a famous cosmic metropolisInterstellar spaceis full of gas and dust clouds, but they're often invisible unless something illuminates them. This interstellar material is thought to consist of several elements: leftover ingredients from galaxy formation, star debris, and the building blocks for future stars and planets. Scientists want to study this stuff to understand the structure of galaxies and the life cycles of stars.
The shockwave Webb studied emerged from Cassiopeia A, now a neutron star, about 11,000 light-yearsfrom Earth. After the massive star collapsed, the pulse surged from its core outward, shooting X-rays and ultraviolet light through space.
Some 350 years later, it traveled through interstellar clouds, causing them to glow in infrared light. The phenomenon is what's known as a light echo. Light echoes at visible wavelengths are due to light reflecting off interstellar material. Light echoes at infrared wavelengths are caused when energetic radiation warms dust that then glows. The latter are rare because they require a special kind of supernova to occur, astronomers say.
Tweet may have been deleted
Webb was built to detect invisible light at infrared wavelengths. Dust and gas in space obscure the view to extremely distant and inherently dim light sources, but infrared waves can pierce through the clouds. One Webb scientist likened the strength of the telescope to being able to sense the heat of a single bumblebee on the moon.
The new images have allowed astronomers to map the 3D structure of interstellar gas and dust for the first time. In particular, the researchers learned that the interstellar medium had surprisingly small, sheet-like features and dense knots. Both are thought to be related to magnetic fields.
The findings were presented at the 245th meetingof the American Astronomical Society in Maryland.
"Even as a star dies," said outgoing NASA administrator Bill Nelson, "its light endures — echoing across the cosmos."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Webb sees shockwave continuing hundreds of years after supernova blast-拍板定案网
sitemap
文章
8982
浏览
53463
获赞
38154
Gmail's compose button on Android gets bigger, but only when you scroll down
Gmail's compose button is annoyingly small and unintuitive on phones. You may have not noticed it, bSamsung unveils new lineup of mid
At its Galaxy Unpacked event on Wednesday, Samsung revealed a new lineup of midrange phones: the GalUber buys Drizly for $1.1 billion, adding booze delivery to Uber Eats
Over the years, Uber has effectively replaced taxi cabs and conventional food delivery for some custxHamster to delete amateur videos in the Netherlands
Popular porn site xHamster must remove all amateur, sexually explicit videos of people in the NetherThe Scantron meme is a clever nod to finals week
Scantrons are the bane of any student's existence. But this meme might make them a little less nerveInstagram's broadcast channels are digital message boards for creators
Instagram users on Thursday learned about a new feature on the platform in an unusual way – viYouTuber MatPat sells his Game Theorists channel to startup LunarX
YouTube creator Matthew Patrick, known as MatPat, and his business partner (and wife) Stephanie areTikTok For You page getting dull? Enter: Refresh
TikTok is rolling out a new feature that will let you reset your For You page if it starts getting dGoogle launches new AR tool to visualise social distancing rules
We're all adjusting to a new, socially distant way of life. Here to help with that is a new tool froTwitter experiments with voice DMs
If you've ever dreamed of shouting at people using Twitter DMs, get ready for the best news of yourFather's Day memes to share on dad's big day: The funny and true jokes for your pops
Nobody appreciates a corny little chuckle than a good dad. Something happens when a person becomes aInstagram now lets you recover deleted posts
Instagram is introducing a new feature that will let you restore deleted posts, offering a safeguardHBO Max vs. HBO Go and HBO Now: What makes each service different
There are now three streaming services with HBO's name on them. Wednesday marked the official launchHow TikTok turned reading into an aesthetic
On TikTok, everything is in pursuit of an aesthetic, including the books you read.TikTok is a visualDOJ investigating Binance for possibly helping skirt Russia sanctions
Binance has a fresh pair of eyes on its business dealings, this time belonging to the U.S. Departmen