Evidence of supernova remnant near the center of the Milky Way?
Using two X-ray space telescopes, astronomers now think they have detected evidence of a supernova remnant very close to the center of the Milky Way.
You can read their paper here [pdf]. The image to the right is a composite of optical (the stars), radio (the red nebula), and Chanda’s X-ray data (the blue nebula). From the press release:
The evidence for the new supernova remnant, located about 26,000 light-years from Earth, comes from X-ray data from Chandra and XMM-Newton. The X-ray data reveals a “blob” of X-ray emission [indicated by blue] that may come from the remains of a massive star that self-destructed as a supernova, buried within the larger cloud of expanding gas.
The location of this suspected supernova remnant in the image is [that blue region]. It is in bubble of gas [the surrounding larger and smaller red objects] that has had electrons stripped away from hydrogen — called an “H II region” — surrounding a massive, young star. If this is indeed a supernova remnant, then it is expanding at about two million miles per hour and is at least about 1,700 years old.
,..The long filaments seen in the radio image are caused by energetic particles travelling along magnetic fields that are mostly directed perpendicular to the plane of the galaxy.
According to the paper, this supernova remnant is found on the western edge of a vast energized gas cloud called the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ), 1,600 to 1,900 light years across, that spans the Milky Way’s center. The features seen in the image above are part of a feature on the CMZ’s western edge called Sagittarius C, which apparently has not been studied as much as other parts of the CMZ.
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