Scientists identify neutron star born out of supernova seen in 1987
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[February 23, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When a star up to 20 times the mass of our sun
exploded in a nearby galaxy, the blast was so violent that it was
visible to the naked eye from Earth's southern hemisphere for weeks in
1987. Scientists have finally identified the progeny of that supernova -
an enormously dense object called a neutron star.
Two instruments on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) that observed
the supernova at infrared wavelengths spotted telltale chemical evidence
involving argon and sulfur atoms indicating that a newborn neutron star
is shrouded behind the debris left over from the blast, researchers said
on Thursday.
Such explosions can forge two different kinds of exotic compact objects:
a black hole or a neutron star. The Webb observations solve the puzzle
of which one resulted from this supernova.
"After having followed the supernova and searching for the compact
object for more than three decades, it is exciting to finally find the
missing evidence for the neutron star, thanks to JWST," said
astrophysics professor Claes Fransson of Stockholm University in Sweden,
lead author of the study published in the journal Science.
"Neutron stars are immensely dense compact remnants of the explosion of
a massive star," said study co-author Patrick Kavanagh, an experimental
physics department lecturer at Maynooth University in Ireland. "It is
comparable to compressing all the mass of the sun into the size of a
city. They are so dense that a tablespoon of neutron star can weigh as
much as a mountain."
This supernova, called Supernova 1987A, occurred 160,000 light years
from Earth in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf galaxy neighboring our
Milky Way. A light year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9
trillion miles (9.5 trillion km). The star, because of its large mass,
had the relatively short life span of about 20 million years, much less
than our sun's.
The light from the explosion was seen from Earth on Feb. 24, 1987, the
day after a burst of neutrinos - subatomic particles produced in vast
quantities when a large star's core collapses - spawned by the supernova
was detected. It marked the first time since 1604 that a supernova was
visible to the naked eye.
Stars at least eight to 10 times the sun's mass end their lives in a
supernova, blasting much of their matter into space after the collapse
of the stellar core but leaving behind a remnant. While catastrophic,
these explosions are the main sources of chemical elements including
carbon, oxygen, silicon and iron that make life possible.
The remnant, depending on the doomed star's size, can be either a
neutron star or black hole, an object whose gravitational pull is so
strong not even light can escape.
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Image shows evidence for a neutron star following a stellar
explosion called Supernova 1987A in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a
dwarf galaxy neighboring our Milky Way, in this handout combination
of a Hubble Space Telescope image of Supernova 1987A and the compact
argon source, obtained by Reuters on February 22, 2024. The faint
blue source in the center is the emission from the compact source
detected with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST)/ NIRSpec
instrument. Outside this is the stellar debris, containing most of
the mass, expanding at thousands of km/second. The inner bright
?string of pearls? is the gas from the outer layers of the star that
was expelled about 20,000 years before the final explosion. Outside
of the inner ring are two outer rings. The bright stars to the left
and right of the inner ring are unrelated to the supernova. Hubble
Space Telescope WFPC-3/James Webb Space Telescope NIRSpec/J. Larsson
Handout via REUTERS
With Supernova 1987A, the star's size and the neutrino burst's
duration had suggested the remnant would be a neutron star, but this
had not been confirmed through direct evidence.
"Direct evidence for either one of these exotic objects has never
been found so soon after a supernova explosion, until now," Kavanagh
said.
Webb's instruments detected argon and sulfur atoms whose outer
electrons had been stripped off, meaning they were "ionized." The
researchers studied various scenarios and found that these atoms
could have been left there in that condition only by ultraviolet and
X-ray radiation from a neutron star.
The researchers now are working to determine what variety of neutron
star this is: a rapidly rotating type called a pulsar with a strong
magnetic field or a more "quiet" one with a weak magnetic field.
The findings represent another achievement by Webb, which became
operational in 2022.
Dust comprising more than 200,000 times Earth's mass formed as
debris after the explosion, making the area around the resulting
neutron star too opaque to be studied using telescopes focused on
optical or ultraviolet wavelengths. But Webb focuses on the
infrared.
"In the infrared, this dust is much more transparent," said
University College London astronomer and study co-author Mike
Barlow.
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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