Supernova 3C58, first observed in the year
1181 AD by Chinese and Japanese astronomers, was imaged by the Chandra
telescope in X-ray emissions.
Credit: Weizmann Institute of Science, NASA/CXC/SAO
Type Ia supernovae are the "standard candles"
astrophysicists use to chart distance in the Universe. But are these
dazzling exploding stars truly all the same? To answer this, scientists
must first understand what causes stars to explode and become
supernovae. Recently, a unique collaborative project between the
California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and the Weizmann Institute
of Science provided a rare glimpse of the process. Their findings were
published in Nature.
The project, called the Palomar Transient Factory, is a robotic
telescope system based in Southern California that scans the night sky
for changes. In May, halfway around the world at the Weizmann Institute,
Dr. Ilan Sagiv realized that one of the bright new lights the Palomar
telescope had pinpointed was, indeed, a supernova -- just four days into
the explosion -- and he sounded the alert sending the Swift Space
Telescope on NASA's Swift Satellite to observe the blast. But the Swift
Telescope also observed in an unusual way -- in the invisible,
ultraviolet range.
"Ultraviolet is crucial," says the Weizmann Institute's Prof. Avishay
Gal-Yam of the Particle Physics and Astrophysics Department, "because
initially, supernova blasts are so energetic that the most important
information can only be gathered in short wavelengths. And it can only
be seen from a space telescope, because the ultraviolet wavelengths are
filtered out in the Earth's atmosphere."
The researchers collected observations ranging from the energetic
X-ray and UV all the way to the radio wavelengths, the latter effort led
by the Institute's Dr. Assaf Horesh. Caltech graduate student Yi Cao,
who was the lead author on the paper, and his advisor Prof. S. Kulkarni,
compared the figures from the observations to various models to see
which fit. Astrophysicists mostly agree that the exploding stars that
become type Ia supernova are extremely dense, old stars called white
dwarves. But a number of models have been proposed to explain what makes
them suddenly blow up.
Ultraviolet observation enabled the researchers to see something they
had never seen before: a unique, brief spike in the high-energy
radiation very early on. This spike, says Gal-Yam, fits a model in which
a dwarf star has a giant companion. "The white dwarf is the mass of the
Sun packed into a sphere the size of the Earth, while its companion is
around 50-100 times bigger around than the Sun." Material flows from the
diffuse star to the dense one until, at some point the pressure from
the added mass causes the smaller star to detonate. The radiation spike
is caused by the initial material thrown off in the blast slamming into
the companion.
Gal-Yam says that the group's findings show, among other things, the
importance of ultraviolet-range observations. He is hopeful that the
ULTRASAT mini-satellite planned by the Weizmann Institute's Prof. Eli
Waxman, together with other researchers, the Israeli Space Agency and
NASA, which will observe in the ultraviolet range, will help researchers
discover whether this explosive process is common to type Ia
supernovae.
Prof. Avishay Gal-Yam's research is supported by the Helen and Martin
Kimmel Award for Innovative Investigation' the Helen Kimmel Center for
Planetary Science; the Nella and Leon Benoziyo Center for Astrophysics;
and the Benoziyo Endowment Fund for the Advancement of Science.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Weizmann Institute of Science.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
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