INBOX ASTRONOMY

Hubble Captures 3 Faces of Evolving Supernova in Early Universe

Release date: Wednesday, November 9, 2022 11:00:00 AM Eastern Standard Time

Hubble Captures 3 Faces of Evolving Supernova in Early Universe



Blast from the Past Caught in Episodes Due to Gravitational Lensing

Light from a star that exploded over 11 billion years ago was captured by Hubble Space Telescope not just as one postcard from the remote past but three messages that chronicle the fading fireball over a period of one week.

For starters, the feeble light from the supernova was amplified by the gravitational field of an enormous foreground galaxy cluster, Abell 370. The gravitational warp in space acts as a cosmic lens, bending and magnifying the light from the more distant supernova, which was located far behind the cluster.

A bonus for astronomers is that not one but three images of the supernova appear in the photo, strung along the cluster. They show the explosion over different times that all arrived at Hubble simultaneously. A clue is that the cooling supernova fireball appears in slightly different colors among the supernova images. The images arrived at different times because length of the pathways the supernova light followed is different. The later images were delayed due to taking a longer route across "valleys" of warped space.



  Read more  

Find additional articles, images, and videos at HubbleSite.org



  Please do not reply to this message.
You are receiving this email because you are subscribed to the Inbox Astronomy mailing list.
 
Produced by the Space Telescope Science Institute's Office of Public Outreach
 

Forward this Message to a Friend »

Subscription Reminder: You're Subscribed to: [HST REPORTS] using the address: example@example.com

From: list.admin@aus-city.com
https://aus-city.com

Manage Your Subscription » or, Unsubscribe Automatically »

To unsubscribe from the Inbox Astronomy list, click the following link: Unsubscribe