Supernova Secrets Seen In X-Rays 23
wjcofkc writes "CNN reports that astronomers using NASA's NuSTAR telescope have for the first time mapped deep within the radioactive material from a supernova. The light from the originating star, Cassiopeia A, located about 11,000 light-years away and having had about eight time the mass of our sun, first reached Earth about 350 years ago. But that does not mean there still isn't a lot to study. Scientists using the NuSTAR, which stands for Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, launched in June 2012 and consisting of an instrument with two telescopes that focus high energy X-ray light, were able to peer deep within the cataclysmic aftermath. While there is currently no model for how the process of a supernova works, the findings in the study are a big step forward. 'Until we had NuSTAR, we couldn't see down to the core of the explosion,' Brian Grefenstette, lead author and research scientist at the California Institute of Technology, said at a news conference Wednesday."
Wilhelm Roentgen Would be Proud (Score:2)
Re:Wilhelm Roentgen Would be Proud (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunately, in this case the observed photons were actually low-energy gamma rays. I guess they are called "x-rays" in the article because they fall into the region of the electromagnetic spectrum that is usually associated with x-rays. Ti-44 undergoes electron capture to Sc-44, which emits the two gamma rays at 78 and 68 keV, and then the Sc-44 decays (again by electron capture) to Ca-44.
But they are not true x-rays.
Re: (Score:2)
There is no universal consensus for a definition distinguishing between X-rays and gamma rays.
Re:Wilhelm Roentgen Would be Proud (Score:5, Interesting)
Universal, no, but physicists agree, and, really, who else matters? X-rays are emitted by electrons (atomic transitions or bremsstrahlung); gamma rays by nuclear transitions. Those definitions have been pretty well agreed upon by physicists for at least the last 15 years.
Astronomers, however, seem to characterize photons only by energy, which kind of makes sense if you realize that they frequently don't know the origin of the observed photons and build instruments for energy ranges instead.
But nonetheless it is still incorrect to characterize these photons as "x-rays."
Re:Wilhelm Roentgen Would be Proud (Score:5, Informative)
No it is not incorrect. Your definition comes from nuclear physics but X-rays and gamma rays can and are produced in other ways too. Electrons can just as well emit gamma rays, for example in inverse Compton scattering processes. And gamma rays are produced in inelastic proton scatterings. As you say, in astrophysics we classify based on energy and typically keV photons are X-rays and MeV photons and up are gamma rays.
Re: (Score:1)
Electrons can just as well emit gamma rays, for example in inverse Compton scattering processes. And gamma rays are produced in inelastic proton scatterings.
In some sense, the GP was correct because in some subfields, the photons emitted by those processes would be labeled as x-rays. Where the GP failed was not for the distinction between x-rays and gamma rays by source process, but for insisting that those subfields are the only valid definition. For better or worse, there are several technical definitions/jargon words that change definition with field, although in this case it is a lot less confusion compared to say the definition of a metal being any eleme
Wiki defn. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Looks like for astronomers, the correct name is "x-rays". At least, you said so. And that being an article about astronomy...
Re: (Score:3)
I Think it means, no working model, which would match observations. In current models supernovas do not happen reliably, the stars fail to actually go supernova. Is it a supernova model, if there's no supernova happening according to the model?
Re: (Score:2)
No model eh? (Score:2, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova#Current_models
http://arxiv.org/find/all/1/all:+AND+modelling+supernova/0/1/0/all/0/1
Slashdot editing at it's finest.
Re: (Score:2)
First comment was 8 minutes after the summary was posted.
Why are you still here? You know what's more annoying than beta? The kid that has to come around every day to tell you that he's leaving. This time for good. I mean it. I really do. I'm being serious here, guys. I'm out. I'm leaving.
Bah to slide shows! (Score:2)
One ugly web page showing thumbnails: http://deslide.clusterfake.net... [clusterfake.net] OR http://desli.de/11IE [desli.de] ...