Crab Nebula: supernova remnant and pulsar (radio view) 29/08/1999
Click to return to main Crab Nebula page The Crab Nebula is the remnant of a supernova explosion that was seen on Earth in 1054 AD. It is 6000 light years from Earth. At the center of the bright nebula is a rapidly spinning neutron star, or pulsar that emits pulses of radiation 30 times a second.
Constellation: Taurus

Optical view
X-ray view
Infrared view
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Image Credit: VLA, NRAO.  

The Crab Nebula consists of a pulsar, a rapidly rotating neutron star at the center, surrounded by a bright diffuse nebula. The nebula, which is about six light years across, is expanding outward at 3 million miles per hour. The filamentary system visible in the optical images is near the outer boundary of this expansion. Both the nebula and the pulsar are bright sources of radiation in all wavelengths.

The radiation we observe from the Crab Nebula is produced mainly by high-energy particles accelerated by the neutron star. These energetic particles, which near the neutron star are thought to include anti-matter positrons as well as electrons, spiral around magnetic field lines in the nebula and give off radiation by the "synchrotron" process.

Radio waves come from the lowest energy electrons. They can travel the greatest distance and define the full extent of the nebula. The Crab's central pulsar was discovered in 1968 by radio astronomers. The pulsar was then identified as a source of periodic optical and X-ray radiation. The periodic flashes of radiation are caused by a beam from the rapidly rotating neutron star.  
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