Supernova Remnant N132D
Supernova Remnant N132D
I am intrigued by the statement in the Oct 25 APOD:
"The expanding shell from this explosion now spans 80 light-years and has swept up about 600 Suns worth of mass."
How is this "swept up mass" estimated? Is there perhaps a deceleration of the ejected matter that can be observed?
Is this "swept up mass" related to so-called dark matter? If so, does this provide a way to estimate the density of dark matter, at least in certain regions?
Just curious.
"The expanding shell from this explosion now spans 80 light-years and has swept up about 600 Suns worth of mass."
How is this "swept up mass" estimated? Is there perhaps a deceleration of the ejected matter that can be observed?
Is this "swept up mass" related to so-called dark matter? If so, does this provide a way to estimate the density of dark matter, at least in certain regions?
Just curious.
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Re: Supernova Remnant N132D
dlw wrote:I am intrigued by the statement in the Oct 25 APOD:
"The expanding shell from this explosion now spans 80 light-years and has swept up about 600 Suns worth of mass."
How is this "swept up mass" estimated? Is there perhaps a deceleration of the ejected matter that can be observed?
Is this "swept up mass" related to so-called dark matter? If so, does this provide a way to estimate the density of dark matter, at least in certain regions?
Just curious.
just at a glance, I would think it means that it picked up all that dust along the way, and that dust (visible or invisible) just adds up to all that mass. I think the question is: is that matter flowing along with the wave??? if so, how much matter can it pick up and move and for how long?
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Supernova Remnant N132D - 25 October 2005
Very near the top right hand corner, almost on the diagonal, is a comet-like streak.
What could this be?
What could this be?
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Nova-Supernova-Hypernova?
It seems in my memory that when I was a young woman in college, we learned that a star explosion was called a "Nova," and that a few really large ones were named "Supernovae." But now I seem never to hear of a simple Nova. Instead, everything seems to be a Supernova, and there is talk of even a Hypernova from time to time. Has the term "Nova" been relegated to history?
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Re: Supernova Remnant N132D - 25 October 2005
http://www1.nasa.gov/images/content/137 ... s_full.jpgsylvester wrote:Very near the top right hand corner, almost on the diagonal, is a comet-like streak.
What could this be?
This might explain what it is.
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Re: Supernova Remnant N132D - 25 October 2005
S. Bilderback wrote:http://www1.nasa.gov/images/content/137 ... s_full.jpgsylvester wrote:Very near the top right hand corner, almost on the diagonal, is a comet-like streak.
What could this be?
This might explain what it is.
there is too much blue in that picture.
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