Supernova
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While many supernovae have been seen in nearby galaxies, they are relatively rare events in our own galaxy. The last to be seen was Kepler's star in 1604. This remnant has been studied by many X-ray astronomy satellites, including ROSAT. There are, however, many remnants of Supernovae explosions in our galaxy, that are seen as X-ray shell like structures caused by the shock wave propagating out into the interstellar medium. Another famous remnant is the Crab Nebula which exploded in 1054. In this case a pulsar is seen which rotates 30 times a second and emits a rotating beam of X-rays (like a lighthouse). Another dramatic supernova remnant is the Cygnus Loop.
- The set of small GIF images used to
create the supernova inline animation is available.
- See also the X-ray binary and
black hole inline animations.
- Visit the HEASARC Images and Video Archive.
You are visitor number 32628.
This file was last modified on Thursday, 26-Jun-2003 13:48:43 EDT
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Last modified: Thursday, 26-Jun-2003 13:48:43 EDT