Once every 50 years, more or less, a massive star explodes somewhere
in the Milky Way. The resulting blast is terrifyingly powerful, pumping
out more energy in a split second than the sun emits in a million
years. At its peak, a supernova can outshine the entire Milky Way.
It seems obvious that you wouldn't want a supernova exploding near
Earth. Yet there is growing evidence that one did—actually, more than
one. About 10 million years ago, a nearby cluster of supernovae went off
like popcorn. We know because the explosions blew an enormous bubble
in the interstellar medium, and we're inside it.
A new ScienceCast video examines evidence that our solar system is inside a bubble of hot gas created by supernova explosions.
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A diagram of the local Galactic neighborhood including the Sun and the Local Bubble
Astronomers call it "the Local Bubble." It is peanut-shaped, about 300 light years long, and filled with almost nothing. Gas inside the bubble is very thin (0.001 atoms per cubic centimeter) and very hot (roughly a million degrees)—a sharp departure from ordinary interstellar material.
The Local Bubble was discovered gradually in the 1970s and 1980s.
Optical and radio astronomers looked carefully for interstellar gas in
our part of the galaxy, but couldn't find much in Earth's neighborhood.
Meanwhile, x-ray astronomers were getting their first look at the sky
using sounding rockets and orbiting satellites, which revealed a
million-degree x-ray glow coming from all directions. It all added up
to Earth being inside a bubble of hot gas blown by exploding stars.
"Within the last decade, some scientists have been challenging the
[supernova] interpretation, suggesting that much or all of the soft
X-ray diffuse background is instead a result of charge exchange," says
F. Scott Porter of the Goddard Space Flight Center.
"Charge exchange": Basically, it happens when the
electrically-charged solar wind comes into contact with a neutral gas.
The solar wind can steal electrons from the neutral gas, resulting in an
X-ray glow that looks a lot like the glow from an old supernova. Charge
exchange has been observed many times in comets.
So, is the X-ray glow that fills the sky a sign of peaceful
"charge exchange" in the solar system or evidence of terrifying
explosions in the distant past?
To find out, an international team researchers including Porter
and led by physics professor Massimiliano Galeazzi at the University of
Miami in Coral Gables, developed an X-ray detector that could
distinguish between the two possibilities. The device was named DXL,
for Diffuse X-ray emission from the Local Galaxy.
On Dec. 12, 2012, DXL launched from White Sands Missile Range in
New Mexico atop a NASA Black Brant IX sounding rocket, reaching a peak
altitude of 160 miles and spending five minutes above Earth's
atmosphere. That was all the time they needed to measure the amount of
"charge exchange" X-rays inside the solar system.
The results, published online in the journal Nature on July 27,
indicate that only about 40 percent of the soft X-ray background
originates within the solar system. The rest must come from a Local
Bubble of hot gas, the relic of ancient supernovas outside the solar
system.
Obviously, those supernovae were not close enough to exterminate
life on Earth—but they were close enough to wrap our solar system in a
bubble of hot gas that persists millions of years later.
"This is a significant discovery,' said Galeazzi. "[It] affects
our understanding of the area of the galaxy close to the sun, and can,
therefore, be used as a foundation for future models of the galaxy
structure."
Galeazzi and collaborators are already planning the next flight of
DXL, which will include additional instruments to better characterize
the emission. The launch is currently planned for December 2015.
How did DXL distinguish between X-rays from charge exhange in the solar system vs. X-rays from hot gas in the Local Bubble?
Answer: Basically, there is a stream of interstellar helium atoms
that flows through the solar system. You can read about it here.
Every year in December, Earth passes through the "helium focusing
cone," a region where this neutral helium is concentrated by the
gravitational influence of the sun. The researchers figured the helium
focusing cone was probably the strongest source of charge exchange
x-rays in the solar system. Using the sounding rocket, they measured
the X-ray glow of the helium and found that it could not account for all
of the X-rays astronomers had been seeing. There must be a Local
Bubble of hot gas to account for the difference.