View Full Version : The Nebula And The Neutron Star


wet1
02-02-03, 09:54 PM
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0302/neutronnebula_eso.jpg

The Nebula And The Neutron Star
Credit: M. van Kerkwijk (Institute of Astronomy, Utrecht), S. Kulkarni (Caltech), VLT Kueyen, ESO

The lonely RX J1856.5-3754 was formed from the collapsed core of an exploding star. At a distance of 180 light-years it is the closest known neutron star. More massive than the Sun but only 20 kilometers across, this tiny stellar juggernaut plows through the hydrogen gas and dust clouds of interstellar space at about 200 kilometers per second. The surface of the neutron star is fantastically hot, around 700,000 degrees Celsius, making it detectable with orbiting x-ray telescopes. But optical astronomers were surprised to discover that RX J1856.5-3754 is also surrounded by a cone-shaped nebula. Indicated in this deep image from the European Southern Observatory's Kueyen telescope, the nebula glows in the red light of ionized hydrogen atoms recombining with electrons. Its cone shape is analogous to the bow wave of a ship plowing through water. A faint blue dot near the tip of the cone is the neutron star itself. The nebula appears to have formed very near the surface of the neutron star and astronomers are trying to determine if the observed densities and temperatures can explain the nebula's appearance.

Persol
02-02-03, 10:03 PM
Now that is cool...image what it would look like from closer (not too close mind you)

blobrana
02-03-03, 09:19 PM
A BIT FUZZY....

The bow wave is probably caused by the intense magnetic field as the neutron star rapidly rotates...me thinks

a quark star?
http://www.solstation.com/x-objects/rxj1856.htm

apolo
02-06-03, 12:56 AM
Thanks for the gorgious picture, wel1 there is realy nothing I can add exept to quote Fred Hoyle. "There is somethings we observe in the universe about all we can say is; we just dont know,(yet)
Regards M. J.

apolo
02-06-03, 01:02 AM
Thanks for the gorgious picture. There is realy nothing I can add exept quote Fred Hoyle; "there is somethings in the universe we observe, about which all we can say is, We just dont know(yet)

Regards M. J.