哈勃望远镜拍摄到令人惊叹的蟹状星云新照片。
Hubble Snaps a New Dazzling Photo of the Crab Nebula

原始链接: https://nautil.us/hubble-snaps-a-new-dazzling-photo-of-the-crab-nebula-1279203

公元1054年,中国和玛雅文明的天文学家观测到白天天空出现一颗异常明亮的“星”,实际上是一颗超新星。这次爆炸性的恒星死亡事件最终被称为蟹状星云。 最近,哈勃太空望远镜捕捉到了星云的新图像,使天文学家能够将其与25年前拍摄的第一张图像进行比较。 比较显示,在最初爆炸将近一千年后,星云仍在膨胀。 值得注意的是,外缘的移动速度比中心快——大约每小时340万英里。 这种运动是由星云核心的一个快速旋转的中子星(脉冲星)驱动的,其强大的磁场将周围的气体卷入漩涡。 这些图像表明,即使是看似静态的天体也是动态的、不断演变的,这要归功于哈勃望远镜的长期观测能力。

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原文

Chinese astronomers noticed a star burning brightly in the daytime that persisted for three weeks, back in 1054 A.D.—and they weren’t alone. On the other side of the globe, Mayan stargazers recorded the same brilliant celestial phenomenon. 

What they witnessed, according to famed astronomer Edwin Hubble writing almost 900 years later, wasn’t a star at all but rather the explosive death of one. That dazzling supernova would later become the Crab Nebula, and the space telescope that bears Hubble’s name recently snapped an incredible picture of it a quarter century after the first image it took.

THE FATE OF OUR STARS: By comparing the first photo of the Crab Nebula, taken 25 years ago (left) with the latest photo, taken in 2024, astronomers can see how the nebula has changed over time. It appears that the edges have changed more than the center. Images courtesy of (left) NASA, ESA, J. Hester and A. Loll (Arizona State University) and (right) NASA, ESA, STScI, William Blair (JHU); Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI).

By comparing the two images, NASA astronomers like William Blair of Johns Hopkins University can track how the nebula has evolved over time. According to Blair, the newly released image shows how the filaments of gas at the outer edges of the nebula have moved more over the past 25 years than those closer to the center. Rather than simply stretching farther outward, they appear to be moving away from the center of the nebula. That’s because at the heart of the gas cloud lies a rapidly spinning neutron star—a pulsar—whose magnetic field whips the gas into a rapidly moving whirlwind of charged particles. The outer filaments of the Crab Nebula are estimated to be moving at 3.4 million miles per hour.

Read more: “The Inside of a Neutron Star Looks Spookily Familiar

“We tend to think of the sky as being unchanging, immutable,” Blair said in a statement. “However, with the longevity of the Hubble Space Telescope, even an object like the Crab Nebula is revealed to be in motion, still expanding from the explosion nearly a millennium ago.”

Ancient astronomers never could have even imagined getting a view like this.

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Lead image: NASA, ESA, STScI, William Blair (JHU); Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI)

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