Weird Supernova Remnant Blows Scientists' Minds
Fireworks display from rare dying star is unlike anything astronomers have seen
By Shannon Hall, Nature magazine on February 1, 2023
Researchers imaged Pa 30s fireworks display using an optical filter that is sensitive to sulfur. Credit: Robert Fesen/Dartmouth College
When dying stars explode as supernovae, they usually eject a chaotic web of dust and gas. But a new image of a supernovas remains looks completely different as though its central star sparked a cosmic fireworks display. It is the most unusual remnant that researchers have ever found, and could point to a rare type of supernova that astronomers have long struggled to explain.
I have worked on supernova remnants for 30 years, and Ive never seen anything like this, says Robert Fesen, an astronomer at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, who imaged the remnant late last year. He reported his findings at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society on 12 January and posted them in a not-yet-peer-reviewed paper on the same day.
In 2013, amateur astronomer Dana Patchick discovered the object in archived images from NASAs Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer. Over the next decade, several teams studied the remnant, known as Pa 30, but the results became only more and more baffling.
Vasilii Gvaramadze, an astronomer at Lomonosov Moscow State University in Russia, and his colleagues found an extremely unusual star in 2019 at the dead center of Pa 30. That star had a surface temperature of roughly 200,000 kelvin, with a stellar wind travelling outward at 16,000 kilometres per second roughly 5% of the speed of light. Stars simply dont have 16,000-kilometre-per-second winds, Fesen says. Speeds of 4,000 kilometres per second arent unheard of, he says but 16,000 is wild.
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More:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/weird-supernova-remnant-blows-scientists-minds/