Showing posts with label Crab Nebula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crab Nebula. Show all posts

Saturday, June 22, 2024

Investigating the Origins of the Crab Nebula With NASA's Webb

Crab Nebula
Credits: Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Tea Temim (Princeton University)




A team of scientists used NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope to parse the composition of the Crab Nebula, a supernova remnant located 6,500 light-years away in the constellation Taurus. With the telescope’s MIRI (Mid-Infared Instrument) and NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera), the team gathered data that is helping to clarify the Crab Nebula’s history.

The Crab Nebula is the result of a core-collapse supernova from the death of a massive star. The supernova explosion itself was seen on Earth in 1054 CE and was bright enough to view during the daytime. The much fainter remnant observed today is an expanding shell of gas and dust, and outflowing wind powered by a pulsar, a rapidly spinning and highly magnetized neutron star.

The Crab Nebula is also highly unusual. Its atypical composition and very low explosion energy previously have been explained by an electron-capture supernova — a rare type of explosion that arises from a star with a less-evolved core made of oxygen, neon, and magnesium, rather than a more typical iron core.

“Now the Webb data widen the possible interpretations,” said Tea Temim, lead author of the study at Princeton University in New Jersey. “The composition of the gas no longer requires an electron-capture explosion, but could also be explained by a weak iron core-collapse supernova.”

Studying the Present to Understand the Past

Past research efforts have calculated the total kinetic energy of the explosion based on the quantity and velocities of the present-day ejecta. Astronomers deduced that the nature of the explosion was one of relatively low energy (less than one-tenth that of a normal supernova), and the progenitor star’s mass was in the range of eight to 10 solar masses — teetering on the thin line between stars that experience a violent supernova death and those that do not.

However, inconsistencies exist between the electron-capture supernova theory and observations of the Crab, particularly the observed rapid motion of the pulsar. In recent years, astronomers have also improved their understanding of iron core-collapse supernovae and now think that this type can also produce low-energy explosions, providing that the stellar mass is adequately low.

Webb Measurements Reconcile Historic Results

To lower the level of uncertainty surrounding the Crab’s progenitor star and nature of the explosion, the team led by Temim used Webb’s spectroscopic capabilities to hone in on two areas located within the Crab’s inner filaments.

Theories predict that because of the different chemical composition of the core in an electron-capture supernova, the nickel to iron (Ni/Fe) abundance ratio should be much higher than the ratio measured in our Sun (which contains these elements from previous generations of stars). Studies in the late 1980s and early 1990s measured the Ni/Fe ratio within the Crab using optical and near-infrared data and noted a high Ni/Fe abundance ratio that seemed to favor the electron-capture supernova scenario.

The Webb telescope, with its sensitive infrared capabilities, is now advancing Crab Nebula research. The team used MIRI’s spectroscopic abilities to measure the nickel and iron emission lines, resulting in a more reliable estimate of the Ni/Fe abundance ratio. They found that the ratio was still elevated compared to the Sun, but only modestly and much lower in comparison to prior estimates.

The revised values are consistent with electron-capture, but do not rule out an iron core-collapse explosion from a similarly low-mass star. (Higher-energy explosions from higher-mass stars are expected to produce ratios closer to solar abundances.) Further observational and theoretical work will be needed to distinguish between these two possibilities.

“At present, the spectral data from Webb covers two small regions of the Crab, so it’s important to study much more of the remnant and identify any spatial variations,” said Martin Laming of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington and a co-author of the paper. “It would be interesting to see if we could identify emission lines from other elements, like cobalt or germanium.”

Mapping the Crab’s Current State

Besides pulling spectral data from two small regions of the Crab Nebula’s interior to measure the abundance ratio, the telescope also observed the remnant’s broader environment to understand details of the synchrotron emission and the dust distribution.

The images and data collected by MIRI enabled the team to isolate the dust emission within the Crab and map it in high resolution for the first time. By mapping the warm dust emission with Webb, and even combining it with the Herschel Space Observatory’s data on cooler dust grains, the team created a well-rounded picture of the dust distribution: The outermost filaments contain relatively warmer dust, while cooler grains are prevalent near the center.

“Where dust is seen in the Crab is interesting because it differs from other supernova remnants, like Cassiopeia A and Supernova 1987A," said Nathan Smith of the Steward Observatory at the University of Arizona and a co-author of the paper. “In those objects, the dust is in the very center. In the Crab, the dust is found in the dense filaments of the outer shell. The Crab Nebula lives up to a tradition in astronomy: The nearest, brightest, and best-studied objects tend to be bizarre.”

These findings have been accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The observations were taken as part of General Observer program 1714.

The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).




About This Release

Credits:

Media Contact:

Abigail Major
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

Science: Tea Temim (Princeton University)

Permissions: Content Use Policy

Contact Us: Direct inquiries to the News Team.


Friday, January 12, 2024

Missing link found: supernovae give rise to black holes or neutron stars

PR Image eso2401a
A star goes supernova in a binary system

PR Image eso2401b
A supernova leaves behind a compact object in a binary system

PR Image eso2401c
A compact object and its companion star



Videos
 
Supernovae give rise to black holes or neutron stars (ESOcast 269 Light)
PR Video eso2401a
Supernovae give rise to black holes or neutron stars (ESOcast 269 Light)



Astronomers have found a direct link between the explosive deaths of massive stars and the formation of the most compact and enigmatic objects in the Universe — black holes and neutron stars. With the help of the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (ESO’s VLT) and ESO’s New Technology Telescope (NTT), two teams were able to observe the aftermath of a supernova explosion in a nearby galaxy, finding evidence for the mysterious compact object it left behind.

When massive stars reach the end of their lives, they collapse under their own gravity so rapidly that a violent explosion known as a supernova ensues. Astronomers believe that, after all the excitement of the explosion, what is left is the ultra-dense core, or compact remnant, of the star. Depending on how massive the star is, the compact remnant will be either a neutron star — an object so dense that a teaspoon of its material would weigh around a trillion kilograms here on Earth — or a black hole — an object from which nothing, not even light, can escape.

Astronomers have found many clues hinting at this chain of events in the past, such as finding a neutron star within the Crab Nebula, the gas cloud left behind when a star exploded nearly a thousand years ago. But they had never before seen this process happen in real time, meaning that direct evidence of a supernova leaving behind a compact remnant has remained elusive. “In our work, we establish such a direct link,” says Ping Chen, a researcher at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, and lead author of a study published today in Nature and presented at the 243rd American Astronomical Society meeting in New Orleans, USA.

The researchers’ lucky break came in May 2022, when South African amateur astronomer Berto Monard discovered the supernova SN 2022jli in the spiral arm of the nearby galaxy NGC 157, located 75 million light-years away. Two separate teams turned their attention to the aftermath of this explosion and found it to have a unique behaviour.

After the explosion, the brightness of most supernovae simply fades away with time; astronomers see a smooth, gradual decline in the explosion’s ‘light curve’. But SN 2022jli’s behaviour is very peculiar: as the overall brightness declines, it doesn’t do so smoothly, but instead oscillates up and down every 12 days or so. “In SN 2022jli’s data we see a repeating sequence of brightening and fading,” says Thomas Moore, a doctoral student at Queen’s University Belfast, Northern Ireland, who led a study of the supernova published late last year in the Astrophysical Journal. “This is the first time that repeated periodic oscillations, over many cycles, have been detected in a supernova light curve,” Moore noted in his paper. Both the Moore and Chen teams believe that the presence of more than one star in the SN 2022jli system could explain this behaviour. In fact, it’s not unusual for massive stars to be in orbit with a companion star in what is known as a binary system, and the star that caused SN 2022jli was no exception. What is remarkable about this system, however, is that the companion star appears to have survived the violent death of its partner and the two objects, the compact remnant and the companion, likely kept orbiting each other.

The data collected by the Moore team, which included observations with ESO’s NTT in Chile’s Atacama Desert, did not allow them to pin down exactly how the interaction between the two objects caused the highs and lows in the light curve. But the Chen team had additional observations. They found the same regular fluctuations in the system’s visible brightness that the Moore team had detected, and they also spotted periodic movements of hydrogen gas and bursts of gamma rays in the system. Their observations were made possible thanks to a fleet of instruments on the ground and in space, including X-shooter on ESO's VLT, also located in Chile.

Putting all the clues together, the two teams generally agree that when the companion star interacted with the material thrown out during the supernova explosion, its hydrogen-rich atmosphere became puffier than usual. Then, as the compact object left behind after the explosion zipped through the companion’s atmosphere on its orbit, it would steal hydrogen gas, forming a hot disc of matter around itself. This periodic stealing of matter, or accretion, released lots of energy that was picked up as regular changes of brightness in the observations.

Even though the teams could not observe light coming from the compact object itself, they concluded that this energetic stealing can only be due to an unseen neutron star, or possibly a black hole, attracting matter from the companion star’s puffy atmosphere. “Our research is like solving a puzzle by gathering all possible evidence,” Chen says. “All these pieces lining up lead to the truth.

With the presence of a black hole or neutron star confirmed, there is still plenty to unravel about this enigmatic system, including the exact nature of the compact object or what end could await this binary system. Next-generation telescopes such as ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope, scheduled to begin operation later this decade, will help with this, allowing astronomers to reveal unprecedented details of this unique system.

Source: ESO/News



More information

This research was presented in two papers. The team led by P. Chen published a paper titled “A 12.4 day periodicity in a close binary system after a supernova” in Nature (doi: 10.1038/s41586-023-06787-x).

The team is composed of P. Chen (Department of Particle Physics and Astrophysics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel [Weizmann Institute]), A. Gal-Yam (Weizmann Institute), J. Sollerman (The Oskar Klein Centre, Department of Astronomy, Stockholm University, Sweden [OKC DoA]), S. Schulze (The Oskar Klein Centre, Department of Physics, Stockholm University, Sweden [OKC DoP]), R. S. Post (Post Observatory, Lexington, USA), C. Liu (Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University, USA [Northwestern]; Center for Interdisciplinary Exploration and Research in Astrophysics, Northwestern University, USA [CIERA]), E. O. Ofek (Weizmann Institute), K. K. Das (Cahill Center for Astrophysics, California Institute of Technology, USA [Cahill Center]), C. Fremling (Caltech Optical Observatories, California Institute of Technology, USA [COO]; Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy, California Institute of Technology, USA [PMA]), A. Horesh (Racah Institute of Physics, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel), B. Katz (Weizmann Institute), D. Kushnir (Weizmann Institute), M. M. Kasliwal (Cahill Center), S. R. Kulkarni (Cahill Center), D. Liu (South-Western Institute for Astronomy Research, Yunnan University, China [Yunnan]), X. Liu (Yunnan), A. A. Miller (Northwestern; CIERA), K. Rose (Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, The University of Sydney, Australia), E. Waxman (Weizmann Institute), S. Yang (OKC DoA; Henan Academy of Sciences, China), Y. Yao (Cahill Center), B. Zackay (Weizmann Institute), E. C. Bellm (DIRAC Institute, Department of Astronomy, University of Washington, USA), R. Dekany (COO), A. J. Drake (PMA), Y. Fang (Yunnan), J. P. U. Fynbo (The Cosmic DAWN Center, Denmark; Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark), S. L. Groom (IPAC, California Institute of Technology, USA [IPAC]), G. Helou (IPAC), I. Irani (Weizmann Institute), T. J. du Laz (PMA), X. Liu (Yunnan), P. A. Mazzali (Astrophysics Research Institute, Liverpool John Moores University, UK; Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Germany), J. D. Neill (PMA), Y.-J. Qin (PMA), R. L. Riddle (COO), A. Sharon (Weizmann Institute), N. L. Strotjohann (Weizmann Institute), A. Wold (IPAC), L. Yan (COO).

The team led by T. Moore published a paper titled “SN 2022jli: A Type 1c Supernova with Periodic Modulation of Its Light Curve and an Unusually Long Rise” in The Astrophysical Journal Letters (doi: 10.3847/2041-8213/acfc25).

T. Moore (Astrophysics Research Centre, Queenʼs University Belfast, UK [Queen’s]), S. J. Smartt (Queen’s; Department of Physics, University of Oxford, UK [Oxford]), M. Nicholl (Queen’s), S. Srivastav (Queen’s), H. F. Stevance (Oxford; Department of Physics, The University of Auckland, New Zealand), D. B. Jess (Queen’s; Department of Physics and Astronomy, California State University Northridge, USA), S. D. T. Grant (Queen’s), M. D. Fulton (Queen’s), L. Rhodes (Oxford), S. A. Sim (Queen’s), R. Hirai (OzGrav: The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery, Australia; School of Physics and Astronomy, Monash University, Australia), P. Podsiadlowski (University of Oxford, UK), J. P. Anderson (European Southern Observatory, Chile; Millennium Institute of Astrophysics MAS, Chile), C. Ashall (Department of Physics, Virginia Tech, USA), W. Bate (Queen’s), R. Fender (Oxford), C. P. Gutiérrez (Institut d’Estudis Espacials de Catalunya, Spain [IEEC]; Institute of Space Sciences, Campus UAB, Spain [ICE, CSIC]), D. A. Howell (Las Cumbres Observatory, USA [Las Cumbres]; Department of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA [UCSB]), M. E. Huber (Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawai’i, USA [Hawai’i]), C. Inserra (Cardiff Hub for Astrophysics Research and Technology, Cardiff University, UK), G. Leloudas (DTU Space, National Space Institute, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark), L. A. G. Monard (Kleinkaroo Observatory, South Africa), T. E. Müller-Bravo (IEEC; ICE, CSIC), B. J. Shappee (Hawai’i), K. W. Smith (Queen’s), G. Terreran (Las Cumbres), J. Tonry (Hawai’i), M. A. Tucker (Department of Astronomy, The Ohio State University, USA; Department of Physics, The Ohio State University, USA; Center for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, The Ohio State University, USA), D. R. Young (Queen’s), A. Aamer (Queen’s; Institute for Gravitational Wave Astronomy, University of Birmingham, UK [IGWA]; School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Birmingham, UK [Birmingham]), T.-W. Chen (Graduate Institute of Astronomy, National Central University, Taiwan), F. Ragosta (INAF, Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, Italy; Space Science Data Center—ASI, Italy), L. Galbany (IEEC; ICE, CSIC), M. Gromadzki (Astronomical Observatory, University of Warsaw, Poland), L. Harvey (School of Physics, Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin, Ireland), P. Hoeflich (Department of Physics, Florida State University, USA), C. McCully (Las Cumbres), M. Newsome (Las Cumbres; UCSB), E. P. Gonzalez (Las Cumbres; UCSB), C. Pellegrino (Las Cumbres; UCSB), P. Ramsden (Birmingham; IGWA), M. Pérez-Torres (Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC), Spain; School of Sciences, European University Cyprus, Cyprus), E. J. Ridley (IGWA; Birmingham), X. Sheng (Queen’s), and J. Weston (Queen’s)

The European Southern Observatory (ESO) enables scientists worldwide to discover the secrets of the Universe for the benefit of all. We design, build and operate world-class observatories on the ground — which astronomers use to tackle exciting questions and spread the fascination of astronomy — and promote international collaboration for astronomy. Established as an intergovernmental organisation in 1962, today ESO is supported by 16 Member States (Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom), along with the host state of Chile and with Australia as a Strategic Partner. ESO’s headquarters and its visitor centre and planetarium, the ESO Supernova, are located close to Munich in Germany, while the Chilean Atacama Desert, a marvellous place with unique conditions to observe the sky, hosts our telescopes. ESO operates three observing sites: La Silla, Paranal and Chajnantor. At Paranal, ESO operates the Very Large Telescope and its Very Large Telescope Interferometer, as well as survey telescopes such as VISTA. Also at Paranal ESO will host and operate the Cherenkov Telescope Array South, the world’s largest and most sensitive gamma-ray observatory. Together with international partners, ESO operates ALMA on Chajnantor, a facility that observes the skies in the millimetre and submillimetre range. At Cerro Armazones, near Paranal, we are building “the world’s biggest eye on the sky” — ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope. From our offices in Santiago, Chile we support our operations in the country and engage with Chilean partners and society,




Links



Contacts

Ping Chen
Weizmann Institute of Science
Rehovot, Israel
Tel: +972 8 934 6512
Email:
chen.ping@weizmann.ac.il

Thomas Moore
Queen’s University Belfast
Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
Email:
tmoore11@qub.ac.uk

Jesper Sollerman
Department of Astronomy, Stockholm University
Stockholm, Sweden
Tel: +46 8 5537 8554
Email:
jesper@astro.su.se

Matt Nicholl
Queen’s University Belfast
Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
Email:
matt.nicholl@qub.ac.uk

Bárbara Ferreira
ESO Media Manager
Garching bei München, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6670
Cell: +49 151 241 664 00
Email:
press@eso.org


Monday, December 04, 2023

NASA’s Fermi Mission Nets 300 Gamma-Ray Pulsars … and Counting


This visualization shows 294 gamma-ray pulsars, first plotted on an image of the entire starry sky as seen from Earth and then transitioning to a view from above our galaxy. The symbols show different types of pulsars. Young pulsars blink in real time except for the Crab, which pulses slower than in real time because its rate is only slightly lower than the video’s frame rate. Millisecond pulsars remain steady, pulsing too quickly to see. The Crab, Vela, and Geminga were among the 11 gamma-ray pulsars known before Fermi launched. Other notable objects are also highlighted. Distances are shown in light-years (abbreviated ly). Download high-resolution video and images from NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

A new catalog produced by a French-led international team of astronomers shows that NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has discovered 294 gamma-ray-emitting pulsars, while another 34 suspects await confirmation. This is 27 times the number known before the mission launched in 2008.

“Pulsars touch on a wide range of astrophysics research, from cosmic rays and stellar evolution to the search for gravitational waves and dark matter,” said study coordinator David Smith, research director at the Bordeaux Astrophysics Laboratory in Gironde, France, which is part of CNRS (the French National Center for Scientific Research). “This new catalog compiles full information on all known gamma-ray pulsars in an effort to promote new avenues of exploration.”

The catalog was published on Monday, Nov. 27, in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement.


 
Narrow beams of energy emerge from hot spots on the surface of a neutron star in this artist's concept. When one of these beams sweeps past Earth, astronomers detect a pulse of light. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

Pulsars are a type of neutron star, the city-sized leftover of a massive sun that has exploded as a supernova. Neutron stars, containing more mass than our Sun in a ball less than 17 miles wide, represent the densest matter astronomers can study directly. They possess strong magnetic fields, produce streams of energetic particles, and spin quickly – 716 times a second for the fastest known. Pulsars, in addition, emit narrow beams of energy that swing lighthouse-like through space as the objects rotate. When one of these beams sweeps past Earth, astronomers detect a pulse of emission.

The new catalog represents the work of 170 scientists across the globe. A dozen radio telescopes carry out regular monitoring of thousands of pulsars, and radio astronomers search for new pulsars within gamma-ray sources discovered by Fermi. Other researchers have teased out gamma-ray pulsars that have no radio counterparts through millions of hours of computer calculation, a process called a blind search.

"More than 15 years after its launch, Fermi remains an incredible discovery machine, and pulsars and their neutron star kin are leading the way." says Elizabeth Hays - Fermi Project Scientist

Of the 3,400 pulsars known, most of them observed via radio waves and located within our Milky Way galaxy, only about 10% also pulse in gamma rays, the highest-energy form of light. Visible light has energies between 2 and 3 electron volts. Fermi’s Large Area Telescope can detect gamma rays with billions of times this energy, and other facilities have observed emission thousands of times greater still from the nearby Vela pulsar, the brightest persistent source in the sky for Fermi.


This movie shows the Vela pulsar in gamma rays detected by the Large Area Telescope aboard NASA's Fermi observatory. A single pulsar cycle is repeated. Bluer colors indicate gamma rays with higher energies. Credit: NASA/DOE/Fermi LAT Collaboration

The Vela pulsar and its famous sibling in the Crab Nebula are young, solitary objects, formed about 11,000 and 970 years ago, respectively. Their emissions arise as their magnetic fields spin through space, but this also gradually slows their rotation. The younger Crab pulsar spins nearly 30 times a second, while Vela clocks in about a third as fast.

The Old and the Restless

Paradoxically, though, pulsars that are thousands of times older spin much faster. One example of these so-called millisecond pulsars (MSPs) is J1824-2452A. It whirls around 328 times a second and, with an age of about 30 million years, ranks among the youngest MSPs known.

Thanks to a great combination of gamma-ray brightness and smooth spin slowdown, the MSP J1231-1411 is an ideal “timer” for use in gravitational wave searches. By monitoring a collection of stable MSPs, astronomers hope to link timing changes to passing low-frequency gravitational waves – ripples in space-time – that cannot be detected by current gravitational observatories. It was discovered in one of the first radio searches targeting Fermi gamma-ray sources not associated with any known counterpart at other wavelengths, a technique that turned out to be exceptionally successful.

"Before Fermi, we didn't know if MSPs would be visible at high energies, but it turns out they mostly radiate in gamma rays and now make up fully half of our catalog," said co-author Lucas Guillemot, an associate astronomer at the Laboratory of Physics and Chemistry of the Environment and Space and the University of Orleans, France.

Along Come the Spiders

The presence of MSPs in binary systems offers a clue to understanding the age-spin paradox. Left to itself, a pulsar’s emissions slow it down, and with slower spin its emissions dim. But if closely paired with a normal star, the pulsar can pull a stream of matter from its companion that, over time, can spin up the pulsar.

“Spider” systems offer a glimpse of what happens next. They’re classified as redbacks or black widows – named for spiders known for consuming their mates. Black widows have light companions (less than about 5% of the Sun's mass), while redbacks have heavier partners. As the pulsar spins up, its emissions and particle outflows become so invigorated that – through processes still poorly understood – it heats and slowly evaporates its companion. The most energetic spiders may fully evaporate their partners, leaving only an isolated MSP behind.

J1555-2908 is a black widow with a surprise – its gravitational web may have ensnared a passing planet. An analysis of 12 years of Fermi data reveals long-term spin variations much larger than those seen in other MSPs. “We think a model incorporating the planet as a third body in a wide orbit around the pulsar and its companion describes the changes a little better than other explanations, but we need a few more years of Fermi observations to confirm it,” said co-author Colin Clark, a research group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Hannover, Germany.

Other curious binaries include the so-called transitional pulsars, such as J1023+0038, the first identified. An erratic stream of gas flowing from the companion to the neutron star may surge, suddenly forming a disk around the pulsar that can persist for years. The disk shines brightly in optical light, X-rays, and gamma rays, but pulses become undetectable. When the disk again vanishes, so does the high-energy light and the pulses return.


This artist's concept illustrates a possible model for the transitional pulsar J1023. When astronomers can detect pulses in radio (green), the pulsar's energetic outflow holds back its companion's gas stream. Sometimes the stream surges, creating a bright disk around the pulsar that can persist for years. The disk shines brightly in X-rays, and gas reaching the neutron star produces jets that emit gamma rays (magenta), obscuring the pulses until the disk eventually dissipates. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Some pulsars don’t require a partner to switch things up. J2021+4026, a young, isolated pulsar located about 4,900 light-years away, underwent a puzzling “mode change” in 2011, dimming its gamma rays over about a week and then, years later, slowly returning to its original brightness. Similar behavior had been seen in some radio pulsars, but this was a first in gamma rays. Astronomers suspect the event may have been triggered by crustal cracks that temporarily changed the pulsar‘s magnetic field.

Farther afield, Fermi discovered the first gamma-ray pulsar in another galaxy, the neighboring Large Magellanic Cloud, in 2015. And in 2021, astronomers announced the discovery of a giant gamma-ray flare from a different type of neutron star (called a magnetar) located in the Sculptor galaxy, about 11.4 million light-years away.

“More than 15 years after its launch, Fermi remains an incredible discovery machine, and pulsars and their neutron star kin are leading the way,” said Elizabeth Hays, the mission’s project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

Source: NASA/News



Explore the Fermi gamma-ray pulsar catalog on WorldWide Telescope

Max Planck Institute release

By Francis Reddy
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

Media contact:

Claire Andreoli

claire.andreoli@nasa.gov
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(301) 286-1940



Wednesday, November 01, 2023

The Crab Nebula Seen in New Light by NASA's Webb

Crab Nebula (NIRCam and MIRI Image)
Credits> Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Tea Temim (Princeton University)

Crab Nebula (Webb and Hubble Comparison)
Credits: Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Jeff Hester (ASU), Allison Loll (ASU), Tea Temim (Princeton University)




NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has gazed at the Crab Nebula, a supernova remnant located 6,500 light-years away in the constellation Taurus. Since the recording of this energetic event in 1054 CE by 11th-century astronomers, the Crab Nebula has continued to draw attention and additional study as scientists seek to understand the conditions, behavior, and after-effects of supernovae through thorough study of the Crab, a relatively nearby example.

Using Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) and MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument), a team led by Tea Temim at Princeton University is searching for answers about the Crab Nebula’s origins.

“Webb’s sensitivity and spatial resolution allow us to accurately determine the composition of the ejected material, particularly the content of iron and nickel, which may reveal what type of explosion produced the Crab Nebula,” explained Temim.

At first glance, the general shape of the supernova remnant is similar to the optical wavelength image released in 2005 from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope : In Webb’s infrared observation, a crisp, cage-like structure of fluffy gaseous filaments are shown in red-orange. However, in the central regions, emission from dust grains (yellow-white and green) is mapped out by Webb for the first time.

Additional aspects of the inner workings of the Crab Nebula become more prominent and are seen in greater detail in the infrared light captured by Webb. In particular, Webb highlights what is known as synchrotron radiation: emission produced from charged particles, like electrons, moving around magnetic field lines at relativistic speeds. The radiation appears here as milky smoke-like material throughout the majority of the Crab Nebula’s interior.

This feature is a product of the nebula’s pulsar, a rapidly rotating neutron star. The pulsar’s strong magnetic field accelerates particles to extremely high speeds and causes them to emit radiation as they wind around magnetic field lines. Though emitted across the electromagnetic spectrum, the synchrotron radiation is seen in unprecedented detail with Webb’s NIRCam instrument.

To locate the Crab Nebula’s pulsar heart, trace the wisps that follow a circular ripple-like pattern in the middle to the bright white dot in the center. Farther out from the core, follow the thin white ribbons of the radiation. The curvy wisps are closely grouped together, outlining the structure of the pulsar’s magnetic field, which sculpts and shapes the nebula.

At center left and right, the white material curves sharply inward from the filamentary dust cage’s edges and goes toward the neutron star’s location, as if the waist of the nebula is pinched. This abrupt slimming may be caused by the confinement of the supernova wind’s expansion by a belt of dense gas.

The wind produced by the pulsar heart continues to push the shell of gas and dust outward at a rapid pace. Among the remnant’s interior, yellow-white and green mottled filaments form large-scale loop-like structures, which represent areas where dust grains reside.

The search for answers about the Crab Nebula’s past continues as astronomers further analyze the Webb data and consult previous observations of the remnant taken by other telescopes . Scientists will have newer Hubble data to review within the next year or so from the telescope’s reimaging of the supernova remnant. This will mark Hubble’s first look at emission lines from the Crab Nebula in over 20 years, and will enable astronomers to more accurately compare Webb and Hubble’s findings.

Want to learn more? Through NASA’s Universe of Learning, part of NASA’s Science Activation program, explore images of the Crab Nebula from other telescopes, a 3D visualization, data sonification, and hands-on activities. These resources and more information about supernova remnants and star lifecycles can be found at NASA’s Universe of Learning.

The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and the Canadian Space Agency. NASA’s Universe of Learning materials are based upon work supported by NASA under cooperative agreement award number NNX16AC65A to the Space Telescope Science Institute, working in partnership with Caltech/IPAC, Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, and Jet Propulsion Laboratory.




About This Release

Credits:

Media Contact:

Abigail Major
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

Science: Tea Temim (Princeton University)

Permissions: Content Use Policy

Contact Us: Direct inquiries to the
News Team.



Sunday, October 15, 2023

Looking for a Dragonfly in the Sky

Composite radio and X-ray image of the Dragonfly pulsar wind nebula.
Adapted from
Jin et al. 2023

Title: Hard X-ray Observation and Multiwavelength Study of the PeVatron Candidate Pulsar Wind Nebula “Dragonfly”
Authors: Jooyun Woo et al.
First Author’s Institution: Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory
Status: Published in ApJ

Figure 1: A multi-wavelength view of the Crab Nebula that shows the X-rays from the pulsar wind nebula (pinkish-white region at the center)
Credit:
NASA, ESA, NRAO/AUI/NSF and G. Dubner (University of Buenos Aires)


Pulsar Wind Nebulae: Little Space Animals

Pulsar wind nebulae are cosmic particle accelerators found all over the Milky Way (and in other galaxies too!). They’re made by the winds of pulsars — rapidly rotating and highly magnetized neutron stars, which are remnants of massive stars — pushing out winds of particles into the environments around them. The most famous example of a pulsar wind nebula is the Crab Nebula, which can be seen in Figure 1 as the small, pinkish-white, tornado-esque structure located in the larger multicolored supernova remnant left over from the original star’s explosion around a thousand years ago.

The Crab Nebula isn’t the only pulsar wind nebula with a fun nickname; in fact, most of these nebulae and their associated supernova remnants are named after animals that they (very) vaguely resemble. There’s the Mouse, the Goose, and the Kookaburra, just to name a few — and of course, the topic of today’s article, the Dragonfly (see Figure 2). Besides slightly resembling animals, pulsar wind nebulae are also thought to produce the highest-energy particles we detect on Earth. A new catalog of the highest-energy gamma-rays ever seen (see this bite) either links or tentatively associates many of these energetic systems with pulsars or pulsar wind nebulae.


Figure 2: Radio (colour) and X-ray (contours) image of the Dragonfly pulsar wind nebula. Doesn’t it sort of look like a dragonfly? Credit:
Jin et al. 2023

Looking for the Dragonfly with All Sorts of Different (Wavelength) Eyes!

The authors of today’s article investigate the Dragonfly with multiple different telescopes that detect light across the electromagnetic spectrum to get a full picture of what’s going on with the particles accelerated in and around the nebula. The authors model the multi-wavelength emission to try to figure out if the Dragonfly is capable of accelerating particles (electrons, protons, and other things) up to petaelectronvolt (PeV; that’s a quadrillion electronvolts!) energies that then interact to make gamma rays, which would classify it as a PeVatron (a name that aptly describes any astronomical source that can accelerate particles up to PeV energies). We detect the highest-energy charged cosmic rays up to PeV energies, but we haven’t seen too many sources that emit gamma rays at these energies due to instrumental limitations and other things like photon absorption. Since cosmic rays (usually protons) get deviated in their travels to Earth by the swirling magnetic fields of the Milky Way, we need to search for neutral particles of similar energies, like photons (i.e., gamma rays) to find PeVatrons, since they trace a straight line back from the particle to its source.

Using model fitting, the authors can create and evolve a pulsar and pulsar wind nebula to match the observed data, which gives them information like the nebular age, the expected shape of the nebula’s emission, and whether or not it can be a PeVatron, among many other interesting clues that help narrow down what’s going on with the particles and material in this system.

In particular, one interesting thing the authors notice is that the shape of the Dragonfly is long and asymmetric in soft X-ray wavelengths (and potentially in other wavelengths, but it’s hard to say due to much coarser angular resolution; see Figure 3b). Usually we’d expect to see a more spherical shape, so the explanation for this could be that the pulsar that’s powering the nebula is zooming through space at an unusually high speed or, more likely, that the nebula lives within a supernova remnant that hasn’t been seen yet. The interaction of particles from the pulsar wind nebula with the supernova remnant can cause some funky shapes to appear in the surrounding material. The authors suggest that looking at the Dragonfly with a long exposure in radio wavelengths might be able to pick up signs of a supernova remnant that are overwhelmed in other wavelengths by the bright pulsar wind nebula to confirm this scenario.

By looking at the full multi-wavelength picture (see Figure 3), the authors note that the size of the pulsar wind nebula decreases with increasing energy in X-ray wavelengths (this isn’t apparent in Figure 3d, because the instrument isn’t able to resolve small structure and blurs everything out to look bigger than it is), meaning that the the nebula becomes a less efficient particle accelerator as we move to higher energies. By modelling this behaviour, the authors find a maximum particle energy of 1.4 PeV, meaning that the Dragonfly really can be a PeVatron.


Figure 3: The observed shape of the Dragonfly in a) radio, b) soft X-ray, c) hard X-ray, and d) very-high-energy gamma rays with X-ray contours in blue. The star or X in each figure marks the pulsar location. Adapted from Woo et al. 2023

Maybe a PeVatron? We’ll Have to Wait and See!

There’s still more work to do to figure out if we can actually see gamma rays at energies beyond a PeV from the Dragonfly and to figure out how particles are being transported around the nebula to get the weird asymmetric shape that today’s authors observed. More observations using existing radio, X-ray, and other instruments as well as future ultra-high-energy gamma-ray telescopes (like SWGO and CTAO-South) can help answer these questions and help us get an even more full picture of the Dragonfly.

Original astrobite edited by Lucie Rowland




About the author, Samantha Wong:

I’m a graduate student at McGill University, where I study high energy astrophysics. This includes studying all sorts of extreme environments in the universe like active galactic nuclei, pulsars, and supernova remnants with the VERITAS gamma-ray telescope.



Editor’s Note: Astrobites is a graduate-student-run organization that digests astrophysical literature for undergraduate students. As part of the partnership between the AAS and astrobites, we occasionally repost astrobites content here at AAS Nova. We hope you enjoy this post from astrobites; the original can be viewed at astrobites.org.


Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Historic Nebula Seen Like Never Before With NASA's IXPE

Crab Nebula
Credit: X-ray (IXPE: NASA), (Chandra: NASA/CXC/SAO) 
Image processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/K. Arcand & L. Frattare
JPEG | TIF



On Feb. 22, 1971, a sounding rocket lifted off from Wallops Island, Virginia, with specialized sensors aimed at the Crab Nebula, a bright cosmic object 6,500 light-years away. In those days, before recovering physical tapes from the experiment, scientists first received scientific data on a strip chart recorder, a device that printed signals on paper. Astronomer Martin Weisskopf and his colleagues began their analysis on launch day by measuring the distance between signals using a ruler and pencil.

“What makes science so beautiful and exciting is that for those few moments, you're seeing something that no one has ever seen before,” said Weisskopf, now an emeritus astronomer at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

Decades later, Weisskopf proposed the development of an Earth-orbiting satellite with powerful instruments that could gather much more detailed measurements of the same kind about the Crab Nebula and other mysterious cosmic objects. That satellite became NASA’s Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE), which launched on December 9, 2021.

Now, more than 50 years after the sounding rocket experiment, scientists have used IXPE to create a detailed, nuanced map of the Crab Nebula’s magnetic field, revealing more of its inner workings than ever before. The new results, published in the journal Nature Astronomy (preprint available), help resolve longstanding mysteries about the well-studied Crab Nebula and open new questions for future study.

IXPE data show that the Crab Nebula’s magnetic field resembles that of the Vela Pulsar Wind Nebula, which is also donut-shaped. But at the Crab, scientists were surprised that areas of magnetic field turbulence were more patchy and asymmetrical than expected.

“This is a clear indication that even the more complex models developed in the past, with the use of advanced numerical techniques, do not fully capture the complexity of this object,” said Niccolò Bucciantini, lead author of the study and astronomer at the INAF Arcetri Observatory in Florence, Italy.

A favorite object of study among astronomers, the Crab Nebula resulted from a supernova documented in the year 1054. The explosion left behind a dense object called the Crab Pulsar, about the diameter of Huntsville, Alabama or the length of Manhattan, but with as much mass as about two Suns. The chaotic mess of gases, shock waves, magnetic fields and high-energy light and particles coming from the rotating pulsar is collectively called a “pulsar wind nebula.” These extreme conditions make for a bizarre environment that is not yet thoroughly understood.

Weisskopf and colleagues were hoping to understand this extreme environment in a new way by measuring the polarization of X-rays from the Crab Nebula, which shines brightly in X-rays. X-ray polarization gives scientists clues to the direction where the magnetic field points in different parts of a cosmic object, as well as how well ordered the magnetic field is. The magnetic field’s geometry and turbulence determines how particles get catapulted toward the speed of light.

In the five minutes that the 1971 sounding rocket experiment spent above Earth’s atmosphere, it produced the world’s first X-ray polarization measurements.

Scientists followed up with a satellite called OSO-8 in 1975, which also measured the X-ray polarization of the Crab Nebula. The rocket and the satellite produced generally the same result: That the Crab Nebula has an average polarization of about 20%.

As project scientist of NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observatory, which launched in 1999, Weisskopf continued his exploration of the Crab Nebula in new ways. With Chandra, “we took beautiful images of the nebula and pulsar, and we could see the jets and the various structures,” he said. Chandra’s X-ray imaging revealed wisp-like structures that move in the nebula, and helped scientists to further understand the relationship between the pulsar’s energy and X-ray emissions.

Nearly every recent large telescope has pointed to the Crab Nebula to better understand this mysterious supernova remnant. But only IXPE can study X-rays from Crab in terms of polarization, a measure of the organization of electromagnetic fields.

“The Crab is one of the most-studied high-energy astrophysical objects in the sky. So it is extremely exciting that we could learn something new about this system by looking through IXPE's ‘polarized lenses,’” said Michela Negro, a research scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center affiliated with the University of Maryland, Baltimore, and a co-author of the study.

Across the entire nebula, IXPE found about the same average polarization as Weisskopf and colleagues did in the 1970s. But with more sophisticated instruments, IXPE was able to refine the angle of polarization and examine the differences in polarization across the entire object. Scientists see areas of much polarization in the outer regions of the nebula, light-years away from the pulsar, where polarization is lower.

This enabled scientists to investigate not just X-rays from the Crab Nebula but also those coming from the pulsar itself, or the sphere of magnetic fields around it. The findings suggest that those X-rays originate in the outer magnetic field region, called the “wind” region, although exactly where and how is still unknown. Within the magnetic field, shocks generated by the pulsar’s “wind” are propelling particles close to the speed of light.

“I'm very proud of everybody associated with IXPE,” said Weisskopf, who was the mission’s first principal investigator. “Everybody has worked so hard, and it works as advertised.” Reflecting on his work on the 1971 experiment that laid the groundwork for the new results, Weisskopf says, “It's like somebody said to me, ‘Martin, you did good.’”

About the IXPE mission:

Part of NASA’s Small Explorer mission series, IXPE launched on a Falcon 9 rocket from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida in December 2021. It now orbits 370 miles, or roughly 595 kilometers, above Earth’s equator. The mission is a partnership between NASA and the Italian Space Agency, with partners and science collaborators in 13 countries. Ball Aerospace, headquartered in Broomfield, Colorado, manages spacecraft operations.



Written by:

Elizabeth Landau
NASA Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0845
elandau@nasa.gov

Media Contact:

Molly Porter
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama
256-544-0034

molly.a.porter@nasa.gov



Monday, June 06, 2022

Two Stellar Evolution Roads Diverged at a Certain Mass…


A Hubble image of the globular cluster NGC 6397, which hosts numerous white dwarfs. The white dwarfs are incredibly faint and can be seen in a zoomed-in version of the right quadrant of the image. Credit: NASA, ESA, and H. Richer (University of British Columbia)

Just by knowing the mass of a star, can we predict if it will end its life in fire (a supernova) or ice (a white dwarf that eventually fades into a cool black dwarf)? A team led by astronomers at the University of British Columbia tries to answer that question by observing white dwarfs in order to find exactly where that dividing line is between a death of fire and ice.


Hubble Space Telescope image of the Crab Nebula, the remnant of a supernova that took place in the year 1054 AD. Credit: NASA, ESA, J. Hester and A. Loll

…But Which Road Leads to a White Dwarf?

When a star runs out of fuel, it can either eject its outer layers in an explosion so violent that it outputs more energy than the Sun will in its 10 billion years of life, or the star may simply expand and settle down into a stable star called a white dwarf about the size of our moon. What determines which route the star takes is its mass: lower masses die a death of ice, higher masses of fire. Though we believe the dividing line is somewhere around 8 solar masses, this number doesn’t always agree with what we observe.

T

he color–magnitude diagram of the Milky Way globular cluster 47 Tucanae. The x-axis shows the color, the left y-axis shows the apparent magnitude at 47 Tucanae’s distance, and the right y-axis shifts the cluster to the distance of the Large Magellanic Cloud. This diagram shows that even at the distance of the Large Magellanic Cloud, these massive WDs are detectable. Credit: Richer et al. 2022

In Two Words I Can Sum Up Everything I’ve Learned About Stars: They Evolve

If all stars greater than 8 solar masses end their lives in the fire of a supernova, we would see a lot more supernova explosions (specifically, Type II supernovae) than we actually do. This dearth of Type II supernovae could indicate that the maximum mass of a star that can end its life as a white dwarf is actually closer to 12 solar masses rather than 8. Constraining this mass limit of stars that can become white dwarfs could inform the formation rate of compact objects as well as the metal content of galaxies. The more massive a star is, the more massive its white dwarf remnant is. Therefore, by hunting for massive white dwarfs, we can effectively hunt for massive progenitor stars that weren’t heavy enough to end in a supernova. A team led by Harvey Richer at the University of British Columbia has looked deep into young open star clusters outside our own galaxy to try to identify massive white dwarfs.

Previous searches for massive white dwarfs in young Milky Way open clusters only found white dwarfs up to 1.1 solar masses, which come from stars no larger than 6.2 solar masses. To probe whether even more massive stars can become white dwarfs, Richer and coauthors searched young clusters in the Large Magellanic Clouds. The team looked at four Magellanic Cloud clusters in which stars of 5.7 to 10.2 solar masses were just about to enter the asymptotic giant phase (a late evolutionary stage in an intermediate–mass star’s life at which point the star has exhausted its main fuel source), which would mean the white dwarfs in these clusters must have come from stars more massive than that. They also chose these specific clusters because of their distance; the Magellanic Clouds are far enough away that there would be new clusters to search, but not so distant that Gaia parallaxes are unreliable and there is confusion with field white dwarfs.


Distributions of the various populations of stars in two of the clusters. The white dwarfs in the leftmost panel are the five potential white dwarf candidates. Credit: Richer et al. 2022

The Universe Is Lovely, Dark, and Deep, But We Need More Data To Put This Mystery To Sleep

The team found five potential candidates in the oldest of the four clusters they studied by looking at the ages and populations of the clusters. These stars represent the first extragalactic single white dwarfs ever discovered. This study demonstrated that it is possible to detect white dwarfs in nearby galaxies with only moderate exposure times with Hubble. However, to study them spectroscopically and determine their masses and ages, the team needs more resolution, which will come with future 30+ meter telescopes. Confirmation of these heavy white dwarfs may finally lead us to the point where the roads of stellar evolution diverged.

Citation

“When Do Stars Go Boom?” Harvey B. Richer et al 2022 ApJL 931 L20. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/ac6585

By Haley Wahl



Saturday, May 14, 2022

Global Citizen Science Project Finds Over 1700 Asteroid Trails in Hubble Images

PR Image heic2207a
Asteroid Trails Mosaic

PR Image opo1733a
Abell 370 Parallel Field with Asteroids

PR Image opo9810e
Broken Asteroid Trail in NGC 4548

PR Image sci19011a
Asteroid in the Crab Nebula (M1)



Combining artificial intelligence with many keen human eyes, astronomers have found 1701 new asteroid trails in archival data from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, consisting of more than 37 000 images that span two decades. The project reflects both Hubble’s value to scientists as an asteroid hunter and how the public can effectively contribute to citizen science initiatives.

On International Asteroid Day in June 2019 an international group of astronomers launched the Hubble Asteroid Hunter, a citizen science project to identify asteroids in archival Hubble data. The initiative was developed by researchers and engineers at the European Science and Technology Centre (ESTEC) and the European Space Astronomy Centre’s Science Data Centre (ESDC), in collaboration with the Zooniverse platform, the world’s largest and most popular citizen science platform, and Google.

The astronomers collectively identified more than 37 000 composite images taken between April 2002 and March 2021 with Hubble’s ACS and WFC3 instruments. With a typical observation time of 30 minutes, asteroid trails appear as curved lines or streaks in these images. Over 11 400 members of the public classified and analysed these images. More than 1000 trails were identified, providing a training set for an automated algorithm based on artificial intelligence. The combination of citizen science and AI resulted in a final dataset containing 1701 trails in 1316 Hubble images. Project participants also tagged various other astronomical objects, such as gravitational lenses, galaxies and nebulae. Volunteers discussed their findings and sought assistance from scientists and other participants via the project’s forum.

Roughly one third of the asteroid trails seen could be identified and attributed to known asteroids in the International Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Centre, the largest database of Solar System objects. This left 1031 unidentified trails that are faint and likely to be smaller asteroids than those detected in ground-based surveys. The vast majority of these asteroids are expected to be located in the Main Belt between Mars and Jupiter, where asteroids of such small size are as yet poorly studied. These trails could give the astronomers insightful clues about the conditions in the early Solar System when the planets were forming.

The project highlights Hubble’s potential to image faint, previously unknown asteroids and represents a new approach to finding asteroids in astronomical archives spanning decades, which may be effectively applied to other datasets. In addition to illustrating Hubble’s value as an asteroid hunter, it also reinforced the public’s interest in contributing towards scientific endeavours and the value of citizen science efforts.

Next, the project will explore the 1031 streaks of previously unknown asteroids to characterise their orbits and study their properties, such as their sizes and rotation periods. As most of these asteroid streaks were captured by Hubble many years ago, it is not possible to follow them up now to determine their orbits [1]. However, using Hubble, astronomers can use the parallax effect to determine the distance to the unknown asteroids and put constraints on their orbits. As Hubble moves around the Earth, it changes its point of view while observing the asteroid which also moves on its own orbit. By knowing the position of Hubble during the observation and measuring the curvature of the streaks, scientists can determine the distances to the asteroids and estimate the shapes of their orbits. Some of the longer Hubble observations facilitate the measurement of a light curve [2] for the asteroids, from which the team can measure their rotation periods and infer their shapes.



More information

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA.

The international team of astronomers in this study consists of S. Kruk (European Space Agency and ​​Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik), P. G. Martín (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid), M. Popescu ( Astronomical Institute of the Romanian Academy), B. Merín (European Space Agency), M. Mahlke (Université Côte d’Azur, Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur), B. Carry (Université Côte d’Azur, Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur), R. Thomson (Google Cloud), S. Karadağ (Google), J. Durán (RHEA for European Space Agency), E. Racero (SERCO for European Space Agency), F. Giordano (SERCO for European Space Agency), D. Baines (Quasar Science Resources for European Space Agency), G. de Marchi (European Space Agency), and R. Laureijs (European Space Agency).

Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, S. Kruk (ESA/ESTEC), Hubble Asteroid Hunter citizen science team, M. Zamani (ESA/Hubble)




Links




Contacts:

Bethany Downer
ESA/Hubble Chief Science Communications Officer
Email:
Bethany.Downer@esahubble.org




Wednesday, July 07, 2021

Let the show begin: APEX’s CONCERTO instrument sees first light

CONCERTO show starts with new view of the Cat’s Paw Nebula 
 
CONCERTO show starts with new view of the Crab Nebula
 
The Cat’s Paw Nebula as seen by CONCERTO 
 
The Crab Nebula as seen by CONCERTO 


 
 
CONCERTO being lifted for installation on APEX
 
CONCERTO lifted into place 
 
Engineers getting CONCERTO ready for installation
 
The CONCERTO instrument on APEX 1 
 
The CONCERTO instrument on APEX 2



An exciting new instrument, a spectrometer called CONCERTO, has successfully produced its first observations: test images of the Cat's Paw Nebula and the Crab Nebula. The instrument, installed on the ESO-operated Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX), will help astronomers probe the mysterious, ancient cosmic epoch during which the first stars lit up.

The main goal of CONCERTO, which stands for CarbON CII line in post-rEionisation and ReionisaTiOn epoch, is to study the birth of the first generation of stars. To do so, it will look at cosmic objects that formed between 600 million and 1.2 billion years after the Big Bang. This era, known as cosmic reionisation, is poorly understood yet crucial in the history of the cosmos, as it marks the transition between the “dark ages” — a very obscure period in the life of the Universe in which stars had not formed yet — and the time when the most distant galaxies we see in the Universe today formed. CONCERTO will also map distant galaxy clusters and star-forming regions in our Milky Way.

As an instrument that is able to scan the sky at frequencies between infrared and radio waves, CONCERTO will look at radiation emitted by ionised carbon atoms, one of the most valuable tracers of star formation in the early cosmic ages. “The objective of shedding light on the reionisation period is very hard, as the signal we are searching for is very small,” says CONCERTO’s Principal Investigator Guilaine Lagache from the Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Marseille, in France. “We will tackle this by using a totally innovative and experimental observing technique, called intensity mapping. CONCERTO will be the first instrument in the world to perform intensity mapping of the primordial carbon radiation on a large field of the sky.”

“CONCERTO is completely unique at APEX,” says ESO Astronomer and APEX Project Scientist Carlos De Breuck. “The other instruments either concentrate on imaging or spectroscopy, but not on both like CONCERTO is doing. And in terms of imaging, with a diameter of about 20 arcminutes on sky, it is by a margin the largest field-of-view ever used at APEX.” The new instrument has replaced the LArge APEX BOlometer CAmera (LABOCA), enabling a four-time improvement in terms of field of view.

CONCERTO’s first light marks the end of its installation process, which started with the delivery of the instrument to the APEX site in the Chanjantor plateau in the Chilean Atacama Desert in late March 2021.

The COVID-19 pandemic posed a considerable challenge to the CONCERTO team, who managed to prepare the instrument for fully remote operations, ship it to Chile, and install it at APEX under strict health and safety conditions. “A large part of this success comes from the team spirit and the fact that we all work with passion and determination,” says CONCERTO’s instrument scientist Alessandro Monfardini from Institut Néel in Grenoble, France. The team is also grateful to the local APEX staff for their dedication and help installing and testing the instrument.




More Information


CONCERTO received funding from the European Research Council under grant agreement No 788212, from the Aix-Marseille Initiative of Excellence (France) and LabEx FOCUS (France). The institutes involved in the CONCERTO consortium are the Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Marseille (LAM; France), the Institut Néel (France), the Laboratoire de Physique Subatomique et de Cosmologie (LPSC; France), the Institut de Planétologie et d'Astrophysique (IPAG; France) and the Astronomy Instrumentation Group at the University of Cardiff (United Kingdom). The Institut Néel, LPSC and IPAG are laboratories of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) and the Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA). LAM is a laboratory of the CNRS and the Aix-Marseille University.

APEX is a collaboration between the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy (MPIfR), the Onsala Space Observatory (OSO) and ESO. Operation of APEX at Chajnantor is entrusted to ESO.



Links




Contacts:

Guilaine Lagache
CONCERTO’s Principal Investigator
Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille
Marseille, France
Tel: +33 6 50 77 35 45
Email:
guilaine.lagache@lam.fr

Alessandro Monfardini
CONCERTO’s Instrument Scientist
Institut Néel
Grenoble, France
Tel: +33 4 76 88 10 52
Email:
alessandro.monfardini@neel.cnrs.fr

Carlos De Breuck
ESO APEX Project Scientist
Garching bei München, Germany 
Tel: +49 89 3200 6613 -  Email:
cdebreuc@eso.org

Bárbara Ferreira
ESO Media Manager
Garching bei München, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6670
Email:
press@eso.org

Source: ESO/Announcements