Datei:15-044b-SuperNovaRemnant-PlanetFormation-SOFIA-20150319.jpg

Aus besserwiki.de

Originaldatei(2.917 × 2.919 Pixel, Dateigröße: 691 KB, MIME-Typ: image/jpeg)

Diese Datei stammt aus Wikimedia Commons und kann von anderen Projekten verwendet werden. Die Beschreibung von deren Dateibeschreibungsseite wird unten angezeigt.

Beschreibung

Beschreibung
English: March 19, 2015

RELEASE 15-044 NASA’s SOFIA Finds Missing Link Between Supernovae and Planet Formation

http://www.nasa.gov/press/2015/march/nasa-s-sofia-finds-missing-link-between-supernovae-and-planet-formation/

SOFIA data on a supernova http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/15-044a.jpg SOFIA data reveal warm dust (white) surviving inside a supernova remnant. The SNR Sgr A East cloud is traced in X-rays (blue). Radio emission (red) shows expanding shock waves colliding with surrounding interstellar clouds (green).

Using NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), an international scientific team discovered that supernovae are capable of producing a substantial amount of the material from which planets like Earth can form.

These findings are published in the March 19 online issue of Science magazine.

"Our observations reveal a particular cloud produced by a supernova explosion 10,000 years ago contains enough dust to make 7,000 Earths," said Ryan Lau of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.

The research team, headed by Lau, used SOFIA's airborne telescope and the Faint Object InfraRed Camera for the SOFIA Telescope, FORCAST, to take detailed infrared images of an interstellar dust cloud known as Supernova Remnant Sagittarius A East, or SNR Sgr A East.

Supernova remnant dust as seen by SOFIA http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/15-044b.jpg Supernova remnant dust detected by SOFIA (yellow) survives away from the hottest X-ray gas (purple). The red ellipse outlines the supernova shock wave. The inset shows a magnified image of the dust (orange) and gas emission (cyan).

The team used SOFIA data to estimate the total mass of dust in the cloud from the intensity of its emission. The investigation required measurements at long infrared wavelengths in order to peer through intervening interstellar clouds and detect the radiation emitted by the supernova dust.

Astronomers already had evidence that a supernova’s outward-moving shock wave can produce significant amounts of dust. Until now, a key question was whether the new soot- and sand-like dust particles would survive the subsequent inward “rebound” shock wave generated when the first, outward-moving shock wave collides with surrounding interstellar gas and dust.

"The dust survived the later onslaught of shock waves from the supernova explosion, and is now flowing into the interstellar medium where it can become part of the 'seed material' for new stars and planets," Lau explained.

These results also reveal the possibility that the vast amount of dust observed in distant young galaxies may have been made by supernova explosions of early massive stars, as no other known mechanism could have produced nearly as much dust.

"This discovery is a special feather in the cap for SOFIA, demonstrating how observations made within our own Milky Way galaxy can bear directly on our understanding of the evolution of galaxies billions of light years away," said Pamela Marcum, a SOFIA project scientist at Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California.

SOFIA is a heavily modified Boeing 747 Special Performance jetliner that carries a telescope with an effective diameter of 100 inches (2.5 meters) at altitudes of 39,000 to 45,000 feet (12 to 14 km). SOFIA is a joint project of NASA and the German Aerospace Center. The aircraft observatory is based at NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center facility in Palmdale, California. The agency’s Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California, is home to the SOFIA Science Center, which is managed by NASA in cooperation with the Universities Space Research Association in Columbia, Maryland, and the German SOFIA Institute at the University of Stuttgart.

For more information about SOFIA, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/sofia or http://www.dlr.de/en/sofia For information about SOFIA's science mission and scientific instruments, visit: http://www.sofia.usra.edu or

http://www.dsi.uni-stuttgart.de/index.en.html
Datum
Quelle http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/15-044b.jpg
Urheber NASA/CXO/Lau et al

Lizenz

Public domain Diese Datei ist gemeinfrei (public domain), da sie von der NASA erstellt worden ist. Die NASA-Urheberrechtsrichtlinie besagt, dass „NASA-Material nicht durch Urheberrecht geschützt ist, wenn es nicht anders angegeben ist“. (NASA-Urheberrechtsrichtlinie-Seite oder JPL Image Use Policy).
Warnung:

Kurzbeschreibungen

Ergänze eine einzeilige Erklärung, was diese Datei darstellt.

In dieser Datei abgebildete Objekte

Motiv

image/jpeg

5e03456583d45b041e7f7a344ac0b898d8f43169

707.877 Byte

2.919 Pixel

2.917 Pixel

Dateiversionen

Klicke auf einen Zeitpunkt, um diese Version zu laden.

Version vomVorschaubildMaßeBenutzerKommentar
aktuell22:51, 20. Mär. 2015Vorschaubild der Version vom 22:51, 20. Mär. 20152.917 × 2.919 (691 KB)wikimediacommons>DrbogdanUser created page with UploadWizard

Die folgende Seite verwendet diese Datei: