Astronomers from the University of Colorado at Boulder and the University of California at Berkeley have discovered a key building block for new stars in the rapidly expanding remains of an ancient stellar explosion.
Published:
11 June 2001 y., Monday
Presented at the 197th meeting of the American Astronomical Society meeting June 3 to June 7 in Pasadena, Calif., the study provides insights into the early stages of a process by which violent stellar explosions help produce new stars.
"This finding is important because it gives us an example of how a supernova explosion can create new clouds of star-forming material," said Brian Rachford, a postdoctoral researcher at CU-Boulder's Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy.
Other participants in the study include Barry Welsh, a senior research scientist at UC-Berkeley's Space Sciences Laboratory and Jason Tumlinson, a doctoral student in CU-Boulder's astrophysical and planetary sciences department and a CASA research assistant.
The Monoceros Loop Supernova Remnant under study resulted from the cataclysmic explosion of a star nearly 100,000 years ago some 5,000 light-years from Earth, said Rachford. The supernova has formed a shell of gas 350 light-years across that is still expanding at a rate of 100,000 miles per hour.
One light-year -- the distance light travels through the universe in a year -- is equal to roughly 6 trillion miles.
The astronomers detected the presence of molecular hydrogen gas in the rapidly moving shell using a spectrograph onboard NASA's Far Ultraviolet Spectrographic Explorer, or FUSE, satellite. The spectrograph breaks up the ultraviolet light in a manner similar to the way a prism breaks up sunlight into a spectrum of individual colors.
Šaltinis:
sciencedaily.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The concept that each person on the planet is just six handshakes removed from every other person has frightening implications
more »
The World Health Organization, WHO, says it is starting a special fund to combat SARS, primarily in mainland China and Hong Kong
more »
European countries are to step up checks on air passengers arriving from countries affected by the Sars virus
more »
Kazakh Prime Minister during a government session on 29 April ordered that a special program of urgent measures be drawn up to prevent the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome
more »
The secret to a long life
more »
Fear of SARS led to the headmistress of Harrogate Ladies’ College yesterday locking herself in a boarding house with 43 of her pupils
more »
Some of the starkest early reports about the deadly SARS pneumonia came not from health authorities, but from Internet discussions in which emergency-room physicians swapped details about the start of the epidemic
more »
Officials say 53 now have died; WHO experts study possible animal link to mystery disease
more »
The construction of the Yuri Gagarin Space Station would require 3-3.5 years
more »
Three Taiwan public health experts have traveled to mainland China to join their counterparts from other countries in surveying the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) there
more »