Before exploding at the end of its life cycle, the star is
believed to have had a mass at least eight times greater than
our sun. It was located in our Milky Way galaxy about 800 light
years from Earth in the direction of the constellation Vela. A
light year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion
miles (9.5 trillion km).
The eerie image shows clouds of gas that look like pink and
orange tendrils in the filters used by the astronomers, covering
an expanse roughly 600 times larger than our solar system.
"The filamentary structure is the gas that was ejected from the
supernova explosion, which created this nebula. We see the
inside material of a star as it expands into space. When there
are denser parts, some of the supernova material shocks with the
surrounding gas and creates some of the filamentary structure,"
said Bruno Leibundgut, an astronomer affiliated with the
European Southern Observatory (ESO).
The image shows the supernova remnants about 11,000 years after
the explosion, Leibundgut said.
"Most of the material that shines is due to hydrogen atoms that
are excited. The beauty of such images is that we can directly
see what material was inside a star," Leibundgut added. "The
material that has been built up over many millions of years is
now exposed and will cool down over millions of years until it
eventually will form new stars. These supernovae produce many
elements - calcium or iron - which we carry in our own bodies.
This is a spectacular part of the path in the evolution of
stars."
The star itself has been reduced in the aftermath of the
supernova to an incredibly dense spinning object called a
pulsar. A pulsar is a type of neutron star - one of the most
compact celestial objects known to exist. This one rotates 10
times per second.
The image represented a mosaic of observations taken with a
wide-field camera called OmegaCAM at the VLT Survey Telescope,
hosted at the ESO's Paranal Observatory in Chile. The data for
the image was collected from 2013 to 2016, the ESO said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington, Editing by Rosalba
O'Brien)
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