Image Cache: NASA has revealed spectacular, newly reprocessed images of four of the most amazing supernovas ever captured by a human science instrument — the Crab Nebula (top), Tycho, G292.0+1.8, and 3C58 — to celebrate the 15th anniversary of the Chandra observatory. I decided to go one step further and collect them all.
While we have detected others, those were either too distant to be observed with this detail or they were detected before we had the appropriate instrumentation. What you can see here are the complete collection of most important ever captured by humankind’s cameras, starting with the rest of the new Chandra series:
Tycho
G292.0+1.8
3C58
NASA’s Astrophysics Division director Paul Hertz says that Chandra has “changed the way we do astronomy.”
It showed that precision observation of the X-rays from cosmic sources is critical to understanding what is going on. We’re fortunate we’ve had 15 years — so far — to use Chandra to advance our understanding of stars, galaxies, black holes, dark energy, and the origin of the elements necessary for life.
The following supernovas were taken by Chandra and/or other telescopes:
Kepler
RCW86
SN 1006
SN 1054
Cassiopeia A
G1.9+0.3
SN 1987A
Sn2006gy
My favourite is the Crab Nebula. Or perhaps Cassiopeia A. I don’t know. I always have a very hard time deciding. I just stare at them trying to comprehend the unimaginable power and processes that are photographed here.