Now 400 years, the Chandra X-Ray Observatory has turned back to image Kepler’s Supernova Remnant, and this is what it saw. The photograph was made by combining more than 9 days of Chandra observing time into a single X-ray image.
Before these observations, the object was a bit of a mystery. There seem to be large quantities of iron, and no detectable neutron star – that would indicate a Type Ia supernova, where a white dwarf explodes after consuming a certain amount of material from a companion star.
But optical light showed that the object is expanding into a cloud of dense material rich in nitrogen. That would indicate that it was a Type II supernova, where a single massive star sloughs off layers of material before detonating.
The new observations from Chandra helped solve the mystery. Astronomers calculated the relative amounts of oxygen and iron in the debris cloud, and determined that it resulted from a Type Ia supernova. It might also be a rare variety of prompt Type Ia explosions, which detonate in only 100 million years, and not billions of years after they form as white dwarfs.
When I heard about this I felt an amused twinge of envy. Over the last…
The Hubble Space Telescope has gone through its share of gyroscopes in its 34-year history…
Any event in the cosmos generates gravitational waves, the bigger the event, the more disturbance.…
During the Space Race, scientists in both the United States and the Soviet Union investigated…
The Milky Way has a missing pulsar problem in its core. Astronomers have tried to…
Space travel and exploration was never going to be easy. Failures are sadly all too…