Hubble finds mysterious ring structure around supernova 1987A | Febuary 1994 | ||
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This
striking NASA Hubble Space Telescope picture shows three rings of glowing gas encircling the site of supernova 1987A, a star which exploded in February 1987. |
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Image Credit: Dr. Christopher Burrows, ESA, STScI and NASA. | |||
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This
striking NASA Hubble Space Telescope picture shows three rings of glowing
gas encircling the site of supernova 1987A, a star which exploded in February
1987.
Though all of the rings appear inclined to our view (so that they appear to intersect) they are probably in three different planes. The small bright ring lies in a plane containing the supernova, the two larger rings lie in front and behind it. The rings are a surprise because astronomers expected to see, instead, an hourglass shaped bubble of gas being blown into space by the supernova's progenitor star (based on previous HST observations, and images at lower resolution taken at ground-based observatories). |
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One
possibility is that the two rings might be "painted" on the invisible hourglass
by a high-energy beam of radiation that is sweeping across the gas, like
a searchlight sweeping across clouds. The source of the radiation might
be a previously unknown stellar remnant that is a binary companion to the
star that exploded in 1987.
The supernova is 169,000 light years away, and lies in the dwarf galaxy called the Large Magellanic Cloud, which can be seen from the southern hemisphere. |
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