Astronomers Blown Away by Historic Stellar Blast
This sequence of images shows an artist's conception of the expanding blast wave from Eta Carinae's 1843 eruption. The first image shows the star as it may have appeared before the eruption, as a hot blue supergiant star surrounded by an older shell of gas that was ejected in a previous outburst about 1,000 years ago. Then in 1843, Eta Carinae suffered its explosive giant outburst, which created the well-known two-lobed "Homunculus" nebula, plus a fast shock wave propagating ahead of the Homunculus. New evidence for this fast material is reported here. As time procedes, both the faster shock wave and the denser Homunculus nebula expand and fill the interior of the old shell. Eventually, we see that the faster blast wave begins to catch-up with and overtake parts of the older shell, producing a bright fireworks display that heats the older shell.
Credit:Gemini Observatory/AURA/NSF/Artwork by Lynette Cook.
About the Video
Id: | gemini1805a |
Release date: | Aug. 2, 2018 |
Related releases: | gemini1805 |
Duration: | 10 s |
Frame rate: | 29.97 |
About the Object
Category: | Nebulae |