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  • Why Won't the Supernova Explode? Presented by Science@NASA

  • Somewhere in the Milky Way,

  • a massive 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,

  • scientists need to examine the inside of a real supernova

  • while it's exploding -

  • not a particularly easy thing to do.

  • So instead, they examine the remnant of the exploded star

  • as soon after the explosion as possible.

  • Harrison and colleagues have figured out how to do this

  • using a new space telescope called

  • the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array-"NuSTAR" for short.

  • Launched on June 13, 2012,

  • on board a Pegasus XL rocket dropped from an airplane high above the Pacific Ocean,

  • NuSTAR is a Small Explorer satellite

  • that carries the first space telescope that can focus very high-energy X-rays.

  • NuSTAR will produce 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 supernova remnants

  • 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 just above 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.

  • 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 are an entirely different kind of telescope

  • 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 focus

  • by reflecting them off the surfaces of the shells.

  • 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 crack 'the mystery of the supernova that wouldn't explode.'

  • And that's just for starters.

  • NuSTAR will also study black holes, blazars, pulsars,

  • and many more exotic objects.

  • The high-energy Universe is about to come into sharper focus-

  • and no one can say what surprises may be in store.

  • For more explosive information about the cosmos, visit science.nasa.gov

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ScienceCasts:為什麼超新星不會爆炸? (ScienceCasts: Why Won't the Supernova Explode?)

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    Wonderful 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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