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Most Beautiful Stars phenomenon

1. X-ray lines in Tycho Supernova

 

The phenomenon of Most Beautiful Stars | This image comes from a very deep Chandra observation of the Tycho remnant super. Low-powered X-ray (red) extending explosion debris. |
While the X-ray color blue indicates the blast wave. Such supernovae have never seen before.

2.
Supernova Casseopia A



This image presents a composite of X-rays from Chandra (red, green, and blue) and optical data from Hubble (gold) of Cassiopeia A, the remains of a giant star that exploded in a supernova.
Inset: A cutout of the interior of a neutron star, where densities increase from the crust (orange) to the core (red) and finally to the region where the "superfluid" exists (the red ball).


3. In Sharpnell supernova in meteorites


This image combines data taken in X-rays. Nicolas Dhaupas, dai Univeritas Chicago, has analyzed these events and estimate the star is 4.5 billion years old.


4. New Star Formed


In this picture looks, the gas particles from stars that have exploded, re-united to form a new star.


5. Lost star core


This image was taken from the Hubble telescope in 2004, and there are peculiarities, ie this star does not have a core that is shaped like a ring.

6. Stomach A star explosion


Astronomy of the University Collorado team investigated the relationship between the star-shaped ring with Supernova 1987A.

7. Removing of Cosmic Bullets


In the picture can be seen there is a cosmic bullet apart from a star that exploded.
 
8.
Carcass Star Wind Swept away


A new image from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and Spitzer Space Telescope shows the dust from the collapsed stellar remnants.
0.3 G54.1 composite image shows X-rays from Chandra in blue, and data from Spitzer in green (shorter wavelength infrared) and red-yellow (longer wavelength infrared).
The scientists think that the pulsar (white source at the center) is being swept away by the wind that heats the dust supernova remnant
.

9.
Comparison of Two explosions


The left image of the star explosion, and right images of a small explosion. Small stellar explosions more symmetrical, while the explosion of the star is not symmetrical (asymmetrical).
 
10.
Stellar explosion