3D View of a Supernova Remnant January 6, 2009
Posted by jcconwell in Astronomy, supernova.Tags: supernova
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Cassiopeia A is remnant of an supernova about 11000 light year (3400 parsecs) away. The original supernova was thought to have been visible around 300 years ago, but except for a possible identification by Flamsteed in 1620, no record of its sighting is recorded. While faint in the visible spectrum its the brightest radio object in the sky, outside the solar system.
Observations using the Hubble telescope have shown that, despite the original belief that the remnants were expanding in a uniform manner, there are 2 opposing jets that are traveling at 14000 kilometers per second. This speed is estimated to be 8800 km per second faster than the rest of the debris. Viewing the expanding star using colors to differentiate chemical composition, it shows that similar materials often remain gathered together.
Thanks to Tracey Delaney of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and her collaborators, by using Doppler data from the spectrum, she was able to do a 3D map of the elements in the explosion. “Now we can see for ourselves with this ‘hologram’ of supernova debris.” And you can see it in the movie below:
Inspirally Black Holes & Charleston January 6, 2009
Posted by jcconwell in Black Holes.Tags: blackholes, EIU
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On Monday one of the more interesting talks was the study of binary Black Holes using DEEP2 data. The second interesting part it was given by a Charleston native Julia Comerford, soon to be Dr. Julia Comerford, from UC Berkeley.
DEEP2 uses the DEIMOS spectroscopic data taken with the Keck telescopes on ~1000 galaxies to get rotation curves on galaxies with redshifts z> .7. Some of these galaxies show evidence of two cores or two supermassive holes due to mergers of galaxies over time. The purpose of the survey is to study the evolution of galaxies and their merger over time.


