This is an image of a small portion of the Cygnus Loop supernova
remnant, which marks the edge of a bubble-like, expanding blast wave
from a colossal stellar explosion, occurring about 15,000 years ago. The
HST image shows the structure behind the shock waves, allowing
astronomers for the first time to directly compare the actual structure
of the shock with theoretical model calculations. Besides supernova
remnants, these shock models are important in understanding a wide range
of astrophysical phenomena, from winds in newly-formed stars to
cataclysmic stellar outbursts. The supernova blast is slamming into
tenuous clouds of insterstellar gas. This collision heats and compresses
the gas, causing it to glow. The shock thus acts as a searchlight
revealing the structure of the interstellar medium. The detailed HST
image shows the blast wave overrunning dense clumps of gas, which
despite HST's high resolution, cannot be resolved. This means that the
clumps of gas must be small enough to fit inside our solar system,
making them relatively small structures by interstellar standards. A
bluish ribbon of light stretching left to right across the picture might
be a knot of gas ejected by the supernova; this interstellar "bullet"
traveling over three million miles per hour (5 million kilometres) is
just catching up with the shock front, which has slowed down by
ploughing into interstellar material. The Cygnus Loop appears as a faint
ring of glowing gases about three degrees across (six times the diameter
of the full Moon), located in the northern constellation, Cygnus the
Swan. The supernova remnant is within the plane of our Milky Way galaxy
and is 2,600 light-years away. The photo is a combination of separate
images taken in three colors, oxygen atoms (blue) emit light at
temperatures of 30,000 to 60,000 degrees Celsius (50,000 to 100,000
degrees Farenheit). Hydrogen atoms (green) arise throughout the region
of shocked gas. Sulfur atoms (red) form when the gas cools to around
10,000 degrees Celsius (18,000 degrees Farenheit).
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