Peering Deep Into The Core Of The Crab Nebula, This Close-up Image Reveals The Beating Heart Of One Of

Peering Deep Into The Core Of The Crab Nebula, This Close-up Image Reveals The Beating Heart Of One Of

Peering deep into the core of the Crab Nebula, this close-up image reveals the beating heart of one of the most historic and intensively studied remnants of a supernova, an exploding star. The inner region sends out clock-like pulses of radiation and tsunamis of charged particles embedded in magnetic fields.

The neutron star at the very center of the Crab Nebula has about the same mass as the sun but compressed into an incredibly dense sphere that is only a few miles across. Spinning 30 times a second, the neutron star shoots out detectable beams of energy that make it look like it’s pulsating.

The Hubble Space Telescope snapshot is centered on the region around the neutron star (the rightmost of the two bright stars near the center of this image) and the expanding, tattered, filamentary debris surrounding it. Hubble’s sharp view captures the intricate details of glowing gas, shown in red, that forms a swirling medley of cavities and filaments. Inside this shell is a ghostly blue glow that is radiation given off by electrons spiraling at nearly the speed of light in the powerful magnetic field around the crushed stellar core.

Read more about this image HERE. 

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

More Posts from Epic-flight and Others

4 years ago
Conjunction: Jupiter And Saturn

Conjunction: Jupiter and Saturn

Credit: Vladimir Mach

4 years ago
Unraveling.

Unraveling.

Twitter / Instagram / Shop / Gumroad / Patreon / Zedge

1 year ago
HiPOD 18 Jan 2022: Icy Cliffs On Mars

HiPOD 18 Jan 2022: Icy Cliffs on Mars

This area, on the western edge of Milankovic Crater on Mars, has a thick deposit of sediment that covers a layer rich in ice. The ice is not obvious unless you look in color.

In the red-green-blue images that are close to what the human eye would see, the ice looks bright white, while the surroundings are a rusty red. The ice stands out even more clearly in the infrared-red-blue images where it has a striking bluish-purple tone while the surroundings have a yellowish-grey color.

The ice-rich material is most visible when the cliff is oriented east-west and is shielded from the sun as it arcs through the sky to the south.

Enhanced color image is less than 1 km across.

ID: ESP_071573_2350 date: 2 November 2021 altitude: 307 km

NASA/JPL/UArizona

4 years ago
Allegiance-class Star Destroyer - Ansel Hsiao
Allegiance-class Star Destroyer - Ansel Hsiao
Allegiance-class Star Destroyer - Ansel Hsiao
Allegiance-class Star Destroyer - Ansel Hsiao
Allegiance-class Star Destroyer - Ansel Hsiao

Allegiance-class Star Destroyer - Ansel Hsiao

4 years ago
The Sun, As Of December 2, 2016.

The Sun, as of December 2, 2016.

4 years ago
F-16 Fighting Falcon Photo By © Rastislav Margus, FlyArt Publishing - Www.FlyArt.biz

F-16 Fighting Falcon Photo by © Rastislav Margus, FlyArt Publishing - www.FlyArt.biz

3 years ago
Saturn Seen From Titan, Illustrated By David Egge, 1978.

Saturn seen from Titan, illustrated by David Egge, 1978.

4 years ago

The Lives, Times, and Deaths of Stars

Who among us doesn’t covertly read tabloid headlines when we pass them by? But if you’re really looking for a dramatic story, you might want to redirect your attention from Hollywood’s stars to the real thing. From birth to death, these burning spheres of gas experience some of the most extreme conditions our cosmos has to offer.

image

All stars are born in clouds of dust and gas like the Pillars of Creation in the Eagle Nebula pictured below. In these stellar nurseries, clumps of gas form, pulling in more and more mass as time passes. As they grow, these clumps start to spin and heat up. Once they get heavy and hot enough (like, 27 million degrees Fahrenheit or 15 million degrees Celsius), nuclear fusion starts in their cores. This process occurs when protons, the nuclei of hydrogen atoms, squish together to form helium nuclei. This releases a lot of energy, which heats the star and pushes against the force of its gravity. A star is born.

image

Credit: NASA, ESA and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)

From then on, stars’ life cycles depend on how much mass they have. Scientists typically divide them into two broad categories: low-mass and high-mass stars. (Technically, there’s an intermediate-mass category, but we’ll stick with these two to keep it straightforward!)

Low-mass stars

image

A low-mass star has a mass eight times the Sun’s or less and can burn steadily for billions of years. As it reaches the end of its life, its core runs out of hydrogen to convert into helium. Because the energy produced by fusion is the only force fighting gravity’s tendency to pull matter together, the core starts to collapse. But squeezing the core also increases its temperature and pressure, so much so that its helium starts to fuse into carbon, which also releases energy. The core rebounds a little, but the star’s atmosphere expands a lot, eventually turning into a red giant star and destroying any nearby planets. (Don’t worry, though, this is several billion years away for our Sun!)

image

Red giants become unstable and begin pulsating, periodically inflating and ejecting some of their atmospheres. Eventually, all of the star’s outer layers blow away, creating an expanding cloud of dust and gas misleadingly called a planetary nebula. (There are no planets involved.)

image

Credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)

All that’s left of the star is its core, now called a white dwarf, a roughly Earth-sized stellar cinder that gradually cools over billions of years. If you could scoop up a teaspoon of its material, it would weigh more than a pickup truck. (Scientists recently found a potential planet closely orbiting a white dwarf. It somehow managed to survive the star’s chaotic, destructive history!)

image

High-mass stars

A high-mass star has a mass eight times the Sun’s or more and may only live for millions of years. (Rigel, a blue supergiant in the constellation Orion, pictured below, is 18 times the Sun’s mass.)

image

Credit: Rogelio Bernal Andreo

A high-mass star starts out doing the same things as a low-mass star, but it doesn’t stop at fusing helium into carbon. When the core runs out of helium, it shrinks, heats up, and starts converting its carbon into neon, which releases energy. Later, the core fuses the neon it produced into oxygen. Then, as the neon runs out, the core converts oxygen into silicon. Finally, this silicon fuses into iron. These processes produce energy that keeps the core from collapsing, but each new fuel buys it less and less time. By the point silicon fuses into iron, the star runs out of fuel in a matter of days. The next step would be fusing iron into some heavier element, but doing requires energy instead of releasing it.  

The star’s iron core collapses until forces between the nuclei push the brakes, and then it rebounds back to its original size. This change creates a shock wave that travels through the star’s outer layers. The result is a huge explosion called a supernova.

image

What’s left behind depends on the star’s initial mass. Remember, a high-mass star is anything with a mass more than eight times the Sun’s — which is a huge range! A star on the lower end of this spectrum leaves behind a city-size, superdense neutron star. (Some of these weird objects can spin faster than blender blades and have powerful magnetic fields. A teaspoon of their material would weigh as much as a mountain.)

image

At even higher masses, the star’s core turns into a black hole, one of the most bizarre cosmic objects out there. Black holes have such strong gravity that light can’t escape them. If you tried to get a teaspoon of material to weigh, you wouldn’t get it back once it crossed the event horizon — unless it could travel faster than the speed of light, and we don’t know of anything that can! (We’re a long way from visiting a black hole, but if you ever find yourself near one, there are some important safety considerations you should keep in mind.)

image

The explosion also leaves behind a cloud of debris called a supernova remnant. These and planetary nebulae from low-mass stars are the sources of many of the elements we find on Earth. Their dust and gas will one day become a part of other stars, starting the whole process over again.

That’s a very brief summary of the lives, times, and deaths of stars. (Remember, there’s that whole intermediate-mass category we glossed over!) To keep up with the most recent stellar news, follow NASA Universe on Twitter and Facebook.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.


Tags
3 years ago
Iapetus, Moon Of Saturn, Observed By The Cassini Probe On September 10, 2007, From A Distance Of About

Iapetus, moon of Saturn, observed by the Cassini probe on September 10, 2007, from a distance of about 73,000 kilometers.

1 year ago
Start Of Everything.

Start of Everything.

Twitter / Instagram / Gumroad / Patreon  

KnownOrigin / SuperRare / OBJKT / Zedge 

  • screechingfunnyquoteshero
    screechingfunnyquoteshero liked this · 1 year ago
  • angelsfat
    angelsfat liked this · 2 years ago
  • kuixotic
    kuixotic reblogged this · 3 years ago
  • kuixotic
    kuixotic liked this · 3 years ago
  • epic-flight
    epic-flight reblogged this · 4 years ago
  • figgdimension
    figgdimension liked this · 5 years ago
  • deathtriponthepartytrain
    deathtriponthepartytrain reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • ultrainfinitequest
    ultrainfinitequest liked this · 5 years ago
  • thalassathesea
    thalassathesea reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • thalassathesea
    thalassathesea liked this · 5 years ago
  • iashawke
    iashawke liked this · 6 years ago
  • littlemxunearthly
    littlemxunearthly liked this · 6 years ago
  • khaledxamoura
    khaledxamoura liked this · 6 years ago
  • hanane-hikari
    hanane-hikari reblogged this · 6 years ago
  • obscurelullaby
    obscurelullaby reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • 4nikam
    4nikam liked this · 7 years ago
  • itstherealjay
    itstherealjay liked this · 7 years ago
  • schallotte
    schallotte liked this · 7 years ago
  • meeloveinuyasha
    meeloveinuyasha reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • meeloveinuyasha
    meeloveinuyasha liked this · 7 years ago
  • lanakeat-blog
    lanakeat-blog liked this · 7 years ago
  • morbid-is-my-middle-name
    morbid-is-my-middle-name reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • muhleka
    muhleka liked this · 8 years ago
  • islemix
    islemix reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • islemix
    islemix liked this · 8 years ago
  • erosspro
    erosspro liked this · 8 years ago
  • estherv7
    estherv7 liked this · 8 years ago
  • watpagin
    watpagin reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • thegalaxyundone
    thegalaxyundone reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • armandofloresworld
    armandofloresworld liked this · 8 years ago
  • luminescentlunaa
    luminescentlunaa liked this · 8 years ago
  • starstripping
    starstripping reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • trizorg
    trizorg reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • ericavulgaris
    ericavulgaris liked this · 8 years ago
  • takieya
    takieya reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • paulitabean
    paulitabean liked this · 8 years ago
epic-flight - Epic Flight
Epic Flight

SPACE-AVIATION-SCIENCE FICTION-RANDOM HUMOR  

236 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags