Blowing Cosmic Super Bubbles: LHa115-N19 | NASA's Chandra X-Ray Observatory
Astronomers used NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory to peer into one particular region of clouds of gas and plasma where stars are forming. This area, known as LHa115-N19 or N19 for short, is filled with ionized hydrogen gas and it is where many massive stars are expelling dust and gas through stellar winds. When the X-ray data (blue and purple) are combined with the other wavelengths, researchers find evidence for the formation of a so-called superbubble. Superbubbles are formed when smaller structures from individual stars and supernovas combine into one giant cavity.
The Chandra data show evidence for three supernova explosions in this relatively small region. Furthermore, the Chandra observations suggest that each of these supernova remnants were caused by a similar process: the collapse of a very massive star. There are hints that these stars were members of a so-called OB association, a group of stars that formed from the same interstellar cloud.
Image Credit: NASA/CXC/UIUC/R.Williams et al.; Optical: NOAO/CTIO/MCELS coll.; Radio: ATCA/UIUC/R.Williams et al.
Release Date: August 30, 2007
#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #SuperBubble #LHa115N19 #N19 #Supernovas #Tucana #Constellation #Galaxy #SmallMagellanicCloud #SMC #ChandraXrayObservatory #SpaceTelescope #Radio #MSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education
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