The 3D fireworks of a star
![]() |
Liimets at al./ApJ
|
In 1901 the star GK Persei gave off a powerful explosion that
has not stopped growing and astonishing ever since. Now a team of Spanish and
Estonian astronomers has reconstructed the journey of the emitted gas in 3D
which, contrary to predictions, has hardly slowed down its speed of up to 1,000
km/s after all this time. Thanks to the images captured from the Isaac Newton
Telescope and the Nordic Optical Telescope in La Palma (Canary Islands, Spain),
a European team of astronomers has constructed a three dimensional map of the
remnant of a nova, or in other words, what was left of the star after its
explosion. The results have just been published in the Astrophysical Journal.
The
protagonist of this story is the star GK Persei situated at 'just' 1,300 light
years away from Earth. It is also known as Nova Persei 1901 because a strong
thermonuclear eruption occurred on its surface on the 21st February 1901. On
that day astronomers observed how its brightness suddenly increased to such an
extent that it became one of the brightest stars in the skies.
The
surprising thing is that the explosion created remaining material made up of
gaseous knots, which become visible in 1916. "From then the visual
spectacle has been similar to that of a firework display seen in slow
motion," claims Miguel Santander, researcher at Spanish National
Observatory and coauthor of the study.
After
patient work to gather images, the team was able to measure the movements of
more than 200 knots as well as the radial velocity using the Doppler effect,
which allows to determine if they are getting closer or moving further away
from us. In this way the 3D map of the nova was created and its dynamic was
analysed.
"Such
data are rarely available in astrophysics because as a general rule apparent
expansion or, in other words, in the layout of the sky, the majority of objects
cannot be seen," outlines another of the authors, Romano Corradi, from the
Astrophysics Institute of the Canary Islands.
An
unexpected result
In any
case, the main result of this work "is that the gas seems to be moving
further away in a ballistic or free manner and is hardly slowing down, contrary
to what was thought in previous studies," comments the lead author of the
investigation, Tiina Liimets of the Tartu Observatory in Estonia.
Until
now it was thought that the gas from the explosion would slow down
"significantly" due to the large quantity of matter in its path that
the star has expelled previously. However, its speed has remained between a
range of 600 and 1000 kilometres per second.
Long
before the explosion in 1901, more than one hundred thousand years ago, GK
Persei had already undergone a massive transformation from a red giant to a
white dwarf. This process expelled its external layers forming a planetary
nebula, which is a giant gas cloud within which the nova is now growing in 3D.
Source: Plataforma SINC
DON’T
FORGET TO-
Leave Your Comments!





