Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Why Won't the Supernova Explode?
by Patrick Barry for NASA Science News
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jun 20, 2012


A supercomputer model of a spinning core-collapse supernova. NuSTAR observations of actual supernova remnants will provide vital data for such models. Credit: Fiona Harrison.

Somewhere in the Milky Way, a massive old star is about to die a spectacular death. As its nuclear fuel runs out, the star begins to collapse under its own tremendous weight. Crushing pressure triggers new nuclear reactions, setting the stage for a terrifying blast. And then... nothing happens. At least that's what supercomputers have been telling astrophysicists for decades. Many of the best computer models of supernovas fail to produce an explosion.

At the end of the simulation, gravity wins the day and the star simply collapses.

Clearly, physicists are missing something.
"We don't fully understand how supernovas of massive stars work yet," says Fiona Harrison, an astrophysicist at the California Institute of Technology.

To figure out what's going on, Harrison and colleagues would like to examine the inside of a real supernova while it's exploding. That's not possible, so they're doing the next best thing.

Using a telescope named "NuSTAR" --short for Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array - they'll be scanning the debris from supernovas as soon as possible after the blast.

Launched over the Pacific Ocean on June 13, 2012, by a Pegasus XL rocket, NuSTAR is the first space telescope that can focus very high-energy X-rays, producing images roughly 100 times sharper than those possible with previous high-energy X-ray telescopes.

When NuSTAR finishes its check-out and becomes fully operational, scientists will use it to scan supernovas for clues etched into the pattern of elements spread throughout the explosion's debris.

"The distribution of the material in a supernova remnant tells you a lot about the original explosion," says Harrison.

An element of particular interest is titanium-44. Creating this isotope of titanium through nuclear fusion requires a certain combination of energy, pressure, and raw materials. Inside the collapsing star, that combination occurs at a depth that's very special. Everything below that depth succumbs to gravity and collapses inward to form a black hole. Everything above that depth will be blown outward in the explosion. Titanium-44 is created right at the cusp.

So the pattern of how titanium-44 is spread throughout a supernova remnant can reveal a lot about what happened at that crucial threshold during the explosion. And with that information, scientists might be able to figure out what's wrong with their computer simulations.

Some scientists believe the computer models are too symmetrical. Until recently, even with powerful supercomputers, scientists have only been able to simulate a one-dimensional sliver of the star. Scientists just assume that the rest of the star behaves similarly, making the simulated implosion the same in all radial directions.

But what if that assumption is wrong?
"Asymmetries could be the key," Harrison says. In an asymmetrical collapse, outward forces could break through in some places even if the crush of gravity is overpowering in others. Indeed, more recent, two-dimensional simulations suggest that asymmetries could help solve the mystery of the "non-exploding supernova."

If NuSTAR finds that titanium-44 is spread unevenly, it would be evidence that the explosions themselves were also asymmetrical, Harrison explains.

To detect titanium-44, NuSTAR needs to be able to focus very high energy X-rays. Titanium-44 is radioactive, and when it decays it releases photons with an energy of 68 thousand electron volts. Existing X-ray space telescopes, such as NASA's Chandra X-Ray Observatory, can focus X-rays only up to about 15 thousand electron volts.

Normal lenses can't focus X-rays at all. Glass bends X-rays only a miniscule amount-not enough to form an image.

X-ray telescopes use an entirely different kind of "lens" consisting of many concentric shells. They look a bit like the layers of a cylindrical onion.

Incoming X-rays pass between these layers, which guide the X-rays to the focal surface. It's not a lens, strictly speaking, because the X-rays reflect off the surfaces of the shells instead of passing through them, but the end result is the same.

The NuSTAR team has spent years perfecting delicate manufacturing techniques required to make high-precision X-ray optics for NuSTAR that work at energies as high as 79 thousand electron volts.

Their efforts could end up answering the question, "Why won't the supernova explode?"

.


Related Links
NuSTAR at Caltech
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








STELLAR CHEMISTRY
WISE Finds Few Brown Dwarfs Close to Home
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 15, 2012
Astronomers are getting to know the neighbors better. Our sun resides within a spiral arm of our Milky Way galaxy about two-thirds of the way out from the center. It lives in a fairly calm, suburb-like area with an average number of stellar residents. Recently, NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, has been turning up a new crowd of stars close to home: the coldest of the brown dw ... read more


STELLAR CHEMISTRY
New 'OPEC' offers sustainable smell of sweet success

Carbon is Key for Getting Algae to Pump Out More Oil

Brazil ethanol plant at risk after protest

New energy source for future medical implants: sugar

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Robots get a feel for the world at USC Viterbi

Robot 'finger' more sensitive than human's

Robot learns language through 'conversation' with people

Russian to fund personal robots quest

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Study: Bigger wind turbines are greener

US wind industry gains major new supporters for Production Tax Credit campaign

Scotland issues rare wind farm denial

South Korea partners for offshore wind

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
US probes safety of 1.4 mn Toyotas after fires

BMW, Guggenheim open Berlin design 'lab' after threats

British car output soars 42% in May

Composites could lead to greener cars

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Guiana offshore oil drilling to restart: lawmakers

Turks seek Iraq Kurds' help in oil drive

Helping superconductors turn up the heat

Power-generating knee strap hints at end for batteries

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Abandoning Fukushima was never an option: TEPCO

Lithuania opens probe into nuclear plant bribery claim

Japan PM orders first nuclear restart

EU closes probe into Areva, Siemens civil nuclear deal

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
1,800 British firms to report greenhouse-gas emissions

EIB, Spain ink interconnector finance deal

New BNDES Investment in Renewable Energy

Residents Save on Reliant Innovation Avenue

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Scientists reconstruct pre-Columbian human effects on the Amazon Basin

Palm oil for India 'destroying Indonesian forests'

Expansion of forests in the European Arctic could result in the release of carbon dioxide

Scientists dispel myths, provide new insight into human impact on pre-Columbian Amazon River Basin




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement