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Jeremy Heyl [Homepage] |
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The bright dot in the image to the right is most likely a black hole or neutron star that was produced in a supernova seen about 320 years ago. The supernova itself is a bit mysterious as it was unusually faint. Most likely, the star that exploded had already expelled much of its outer layers before the explosion. Until the Chandra X-ray observatory pointed its mirror toward the supernova remnant Cassiopeia A, we did not know whether the supernova produced a black hole, a neutron star or left no remnant at all.
Understanding how a neutron star appears to our telescopes on and near Earth is an important part of my recent research. Observations of neutron stars can tell us about the nature of matter at extremely high densities, about the forces that hold nuclei together and about how materials and the vacuum itself are distorted by intense gravitational and magnetic fields. Neutron stars reveal themselves in several different ways. As a massive star runs out of fuel, its inner regions collapse to form a very hot neutron star. This collapse drives the explosion of the rest of the star -- a supernova. The neutron star remains hot enough to been seen by X-ray telescopes orbiting the Earth for ten thousand to one million years like in the image. This cooling radiation and how it changes will time give important hints on the composition of the inside of neutron stars. Many stars have one or more companions. If one of the stars explodes as a supernova and leaves a neutron star as a remnant, the neutron star can accrete material from the companion. This matter heats up as it falls toward the neutron star and hits its surface. This hot material emits X-rays which we also observe from X-ray telescopes. This radiation also gives important clues about the nature of neutron stars and their environment. Jeremy Heyl <heyl@physics.ubc.ca> Last modified: Thursday, 30 October 2003 16:58:08 www.digits.com counter : Add AstroTab to your Netscape 6 sidebar! | ||||||||