SN 1996cr in Circinus galaxy

This composite image shows the central regions of the nearby Circinus galaxy, located about 12 million light years away. Data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory is shown in blue and data from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space telescope is shown in yellow ("I-band"), red (hydrogen emission), cyan ("V-band") and light blue (oxygen emission). The blue source near the lower right hand corner of the image is the supernova SN 1996cr, that has finally been identified over a decade after it exploded. The supernova was first singled out in 2001 as a bright, variable object in a Chandra image, but it was not confirmed as a supernova until years later, when clues from a spectrum obtained with ESO's Very Large Telescope led the team to start the real detective work of searching through data from 18 different telescopes, both ground- and space-based, nearly all of which was in the archives. SN 1996cr is one of the nearest supernovae in the last 25 years.

Kilde:

X-ray (NASA/CXC/Columbia/F.Bauer et al); Visible light (NASA/STScI/UMD/A.Wilson et al.)

Om billedet

Id:eso0832a
Type:Observation
Udgivelsesdato:25. september 2008
Relaterede pressemeddelelser:eso0832
Størrelse:2400 x 1999 px

Om objektet

Navn:Circinus Galaxy
Type:Local Universe : Galaxy : Type : Spiral
Local Universe : Star : Evolutionary Stage : Supernova
Afstand:13 million lysår
Constellation:Circinus
Kategori:Galaxies
Stars

Billedformater

Stor JPEG
1,2 MB
Skrærm JPEG
194,4 KB

Zoombar


Baggrundsbilleder

1024x768
273,4 KB
1280x1024
422,8 KB
1600x1200
604,6 KB
1920x1200
718,6 KB
2048x1536
931,5 KB

Koordinater

Position (RA):14 13 9.38
Position (Dec):-65° 20' 22.93"
Field of view:0.72 x 0.60 arcminutes
Orientering:Nord er 62.2° venstre fra lodret

Farver & filtre

BåndBølgelængdeTeleskop
Optisk
OIII
502 nmHubble Space Telescope
ACS
RøntgenChandra X-ray Observatory
Optisk
V
547 nmHubble Space Telescope
ACS
Infrarød
I
814 nmHubble Space Telescope
ACS
Optisk
H-alpha
Hubble Space Telescope
ACS