Astonishing Image Of Shockwaves From A Dying Star 10
angkor writes: "This is worth a look: "A new image from the Hubble telescope shows a pair of supersonic shock waves created when gas from a collapsing star hits surrounding clouds of cosmic gas and dust." And an enlarged image for your desktop."
Supersonic? (Score:1)
Re:Supersonic? (Score:4, Informative)
A wave of more gas (also very diffuse) is hitting this cloud, faster than the speed of sound in the cloud, and pushing this "shock wave" in front of it.
Is there something I'm missing? (Score:1)
"an event that happened about 800 years ago in a constellation 5,000 light-years away"
Well, if the event took place 800 years ago, and the distance is 5,000 ly, then we should wait another 4,200 years for the light of the event to reach us... It doesn't make sense!
Cheers
Re:Is there something I'm missing? (Score:1)
Reading the caption under pictures sure helps you understand them.
Re:Is there something I'm missing? (Score:1)
Or it seems to for me, anyway.
No smell in space? (Score:2)
Would somebody care to explain this? Perhaps I don't understand how smell works, but I never thought that oxygen was a required factor. If you could overcome that fact that you'd either freeze to death or some other nasty cold-vacuum related fate if you exposed your nose in space, should you still be able to pick up the displeasure of sulfur gas?
Re:No smell in space? (Score:1)
High-res image (Score:1)