The origin of supernovae confirmed

March 19, 2009

Where do supernovae come from? Astronomers have long believed they were exploding stars, but by analysing a series of images, researchers from the Dark Cosmology Centre at the Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen and from Queens University, Belfast have proven that two dying red supergiant stars produced supernovae. The results are published in the prestigious scientific journal, Science.

A star is a large ball of hot gas and in its incredibly hot interior hydrogen atoms combine to form helium, which subsequently forms carbon, other heavier elements and finally iron. When all the atoms in the centre have turned to iron the fuel is depleted and the star dies. When very large and massive , that are at least about eight times as massive as our sun, die, they explode as .

Enormous swollen stars

But some become red supergiant stars first, which is an where, after the fuel in the centre is used up, energy is still produced in shells surrounding the now dead core. In this phase, the star swells up to an enormous size, approximately 1500 times larger than the sun, and emits as much light as a hundred thousand suns. But there has been doubt over whether red supergiants explode as supernovae.

Using images from the Hubble Space Telescope and the Gemini Observatory, Justyn R. Maund, at the Dark Cosmology Centre, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen and astrophysicist Stephen J. Smartt, Queens University Belfast, have observed two stars that exploded as supernovae. By analysing archival images of the same section of the sky from long before the explosions, the researchers could see which stars might have gone supernova. But picking out individual stars in the distant universe is difficult, and pinpointing exactly which star it was that exploded is a huge challenge.

Stars became supernovae

A supernova is visible in the sky for some time after its explosion before its giant dust- and are blown clear. The researchers can then observe the region around the position of the supernova several years after the supernova explosion and can then see exactly which star has disappeared.

For one of the supernovae, SN1993J (which exploded in 1993) they found that a red supergiant no longer exists, but that its neighboring star remained. In addition, they found that the red supergiant that was postulated to have caused the supernova SN2003gd has also disappeared. This simple but very time intensive method, establishes that it was these two red supergiant stars that produced the supernovae 2003J and 2003gd, and confirms that red supergiant stars create type II supernovae.

Maund and Smartt have found the missing link between red supergiant stars and their supernovae, giving astronomers a greater understanding of how massive stars die. Stellar death is a process crucial for understanding the origin of the chemical elements in the Universe, a precursor necessary ultimately to the formation of planets and life.

More information: Science Express: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/short/1170198

Source: University of Copenhagen


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  • Thecis - Mar 23, 2009
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    Does anyone know how fast the actual supernova happens?
    The "swelling" will probably take some time but is the acutal explosion comparable to i.e. a normal explosion on earth (but then a bit bigger)?

    Or is the supernova a slow process in which the star expands dramatically (I dont mean a red giant like described above) over a matter of years which is mind staggling fast in the eyes of the universe.
  • yyz - Mar 26, 2009
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    The paper discussing these two supernova can be found here: http://arxiv.org/...72v1.pdf .Check out the Gemini press release at http://www.gemini...de/11244 for pictures to ID the supernova 'before and after' it went off. The pre-supernova image is quite faint, but is clearly seen.

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