Supernova Remnants (original) (raw)
[ ](m/m001.html)Click to go to the only supernova remnant in Messier's catalog, the first object, the Crab Nebula M1. M1 is also shown in the icon.
When a star explodes in a supernova explosion, it depends on its type what exactly remains. But anyway, the offbursted gaseous remainders will form a rapidly expanding and slowly fading cloud, mixing with the interstellar matter which is "swept up" when the shell expands, and is a domain of an extreme kind of physics. These nebulae are called supernova remnants (SNRs). Depending on the type of the supernova, there may also be a central compact remnant in the form of a neutron star.
According to current theory, two different mechanisms produce supernovae: First, stars considerably more massive than our Sun can most probably not evolve quietly into an end state as a white dwarf. When coming to age, these massive stars explode in a most violent detonation which flashes up at a luminosity of up to 10 billion times that of the sun, called supernova (of type II, or Ib or Ic), and ejecting the very greatest part of the stellar matter in a violently expanding shell. These explosions are thought to leave a compact remnant, such as a neutron star. Aternatively, infalling matter on a white dwarf star can cause it to explode as a supernova of type Ia; these events do probably not leave a stellar remnant.
The classification of supernovae in types was introduced by Rudolph Minkowski (Minkowski 1941) on the grounds of their spectra: Type I supernovae show no hydrogen lines in their spectra, whereas these lines are present in those of Type II. Later these types were subdivided, again based on their spectra; for a summary see e.g. Turatto (2003). For Type I, subtype Ia shows no Helium in spectrum, characteristic absorption features, and in its later phase, emission lines from elements in the iron group. Type Ib shows helium lines, type Ic no helium but in its later phase, oxygen and calcium lines. Supernovae of types Ib and Ic are thought to originate from massive progenitor stars which have been stripped off their outer layers by companion stars, and thus lost their hydrogen and for Ic, also their helium. Supernovae of type II may be further distinguished both for their light curves and for their spectra: Subtype IIP ("Plateau"), sometimes referred to as "normal" SN II, shows a plateau in its light curve when the luminosity decline after maximum stops for about 2-3 months. SN IIL ("linear"), on the other hand, exhibit a linear decline of brightness after maximum. SN IIn eventually show "narrow" emission lines in their spectra.
The Crab Nebula M1 is the only Messier SNR, the remnant of the supernova of 1054 (very probably of Type II), one of fewhistorical supernovae observed in our Milky Way galaxy. However, other supernovae have appeared in Messier galaxies (see our table), and produced SNRs. These special kind of nebulae can be observed in some cases, e.g. the remnant of theSupernova 1993J in M81.
With only one supernova remnant in Messier's catalog, the larger NGC and IC contain only two and one further object, respectively, in the Milky Way Galaxy: The Veil Nebula or Cygnus Loop (with different NGC and IC numbers for its parts), the Pencil Nebula NGC 2736as part of the Vela SNR, and IC 443. Moreover, NGC contains two supernova remnants in the Large Magellanic Cloud: NGC 1918 and NGC 2060. As of March 2009, the total number of SNRs known in the Milky Way has been given as 274, and to May 2014, as 294, given by D.A. Green's Catalogue of Galactic Supernova Remnants(Green 2009, 2014).
The knowledge of the nature of the supernova phenomenon, and the name "supernova", goes back to Walter Baade and Fritz Zwicky, who studied Novae in the early 1930s at Mt. Wilson Observatory. They were especially interested, and successful, in finding extremely bright "novae" in other galaxies, comparable to the one which had been observed in the Andromeda Galaxy M31 in 1885 (S Andromedae). They coined the term "Super-Novae" in 1934 (Baade, Zwicky 1934).
Interesting resources on supernova remnants:
- D.A. Green's Catalogue of Galactic Supernova Remnants (June 2017 version), Mullard Observatory, Cambridge, UK. See Green (2009),Green 2014. ( Crab nebula M1 data from this catalog)
- Einstein Satellite images of SNRs (Fred Seward, Harvard)
- SNORE: Supernova Remnants Group at Harvard
- Pat Slane's SNR page
- SNR page at HEASARC (GSFC/Nasa)
- SNR page at NRL (N.E. Kasim, K.W. Weiler)
- SNR Catalogs List
- ARVAL Catalog of Bright Nebulae (including SNRs)
- Look at Supernova Remnants in Messier's Catalog
- Look at some significant non-Messier SNRs Supernova resources:
- The Supernova Pages List by Marcos J. Montes
- International Supernova Network
- Lists of Recent and all supernovae detected (CfA/Harvard);Asagio supenova list
- Supernovae in NGC and IC galaxies
- Supernovae in Messier Galaxies - Messier Galaxies and their Supernovae
- Supernova Radio Observation page (NRL, K.W. Weiler)
- Wayne P. Johnson's introduction to supernovae
- Supernova Types (by Mike Richmond)
- Images from some supernovae, collected by Greg Bothun at the University of Oregon
- Some supernova spectra References:
- Walter Baade and Fritz Zwicky, 1934. On Super-Novae. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 20, No. 5 (May 15, 1934), pp. 254-259 [ADS: 1934PNAS...20..254B]. Coin the name "Super-novae."
- David A. Green, 2009. A revised Galactic supernova remnant catalogue. Bulletin of the Astronomical Society of India, Vol. 37, No. 1, pp. 45-61 (March 2009). [ADS: 2009BASI...37...45G] - [Preprint: arXiv:0905.3699[astro-ph.HE]]
- David A. Green, 2014. A Catalogue of 294 Galactic supernova remnants. [ADS: 2014BASI...42...47G] - [Prerpint: arXiv:1409.0637[astro-ph.HE]] Available online as: A Catalogue of Galactic Supernova Remnants (2017 June version). http://www.mrao.cam.ac.uk/surveys/snrs/.
- Rudolph Minkowski, 1941. Spectra of Supernovae. Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Vol. 53, No. 314, pp. 224-225 (August 1941) [ADS: 1941PASP...53..224M]. Introduces Supernova Types I and II.
- Massimo Turatto, 2003. Classification of Supernovae. In: Kurt W. Weiler (ed.). Supernovae and Gamma-Ray Bursters. Lecture Notes in Physics, Vol. 598, pp. 21-36. [ADS: 2003LNP...598...21T] - [Preprint: astro-ph/0301107]
Hartmut Frommert
Christine Kronberg
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Last Modification: August 15, 2019