EuropeSouth AsiaAsia PacificAmericasMiddle EastAfricaBBC HomepageWorld ServiceEducation
News image
News image
News image
News imageNews image
News image
Front Page
News image
World
News image
UK
News image
UK Politics
News image
Business
News image
Sci/Tech
News image
Health
News image
Education
News image
Sport
News image
Entertainment
News image
Talking Point
News image
In Depth
News image
On Air
News image
Archive
News image
News image
News image
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help
News imageNews imageNews image
Friday, August 27, 1999 Published at 11:52 GMT 12:52 UK
News image
News image
Sci/Tech
News image
Impressive debut for Chandra
News image

News image
The first images taken by the new Chandra X-ray observatory have just been released.

One of them shows a gigantic stellar explosion in such stunning detail that scientists think they can see evidence of what may be a neutron star or black hole at the centre of the blast.

The pictures are everything astronomers had hoped for from the $1.5bn observatory which was carried into an orbit around the Earth last month on board the shuttle Columbia.

After going through an extensive checkout and calibration procedure to see that all systems were working properly, Chandra last week opened its sunshade door and pointed its detection equipment at the cosmos.


[ image: The shuttle Columbia had to be modified to carry Chandra into orbit]
The shuttle Columbia had to be modified to carry Chandra into orbit
One of its first targets was the 320-year-old supernova remnant Cassiopeia A (top picture), which astronomers believe was produced by the explosion of a massive star that collapsed in on itself.

Material blasted into space from the explosion crashed into surrounding material at 16 million kilometres per hour. This collision caused violent shock waves, like massive sonic booms, creating a vast, 50-million degree bubble of X-ray emitting gas.

This is what Chandra was put in space to see: not the light that we can pick up with ordinary optical telescopes but the high-energy, invisible x-rays that are emitted from the hottest and most violent parts of the Universe.

"We were astounded by these images," said Harvey Tananbaum, Director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center.

"We see the collision of the debris from the exploded star with the matter around it, we see shock waves rushing into interstellar space at millions of miles per hour, and, as a real bonus, we see for the first time a tantalising bright point near the centre of the remnant that could possibly be a collapsed star associated with the outburst."

10 trillion Suns

Another of the images is of Quasar PKS 0637-752. It is so distant that we see it as it was six billion years ago. It is a luminous quasar radiating the power of 10 trillion Suns from a region smaller than our Solar System.

The source of this enormous energy is believed to be a supermassive black hole. Chandra's X-ray image shows a powerful X-ray jet stretching across several hundred thousand light years, which is most likely the result of a beam of extremely high energy particles.


[ image: Quasar PKS 0637-752: As it was six billion years ago]
Quasar PKS 0637-752: As it was six billion years ago
Chandra will spend at least five years making these sorts of observations. Ten to 100 times more powerful than similar telescopes previously placed in orbit, it heralds a revolution in X-ray astronomy.

"When I saw the first image, I knew that the dream had been realised," said Dr Martin Weisskopf, Chandra Project Scientist at Nasa's Marshall Space Flight Center.

"This observatory is ready to take its place in the history of spectacular scientific achievements."

Named in honour of the late Nobel laureate Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, the observatory will help astronomers answer fundamental questions about the evolution of the Universe.


News imageNews image
Nasa commentary of Chandra's deployment from Columbia
Its ability to precisely measure X-rays will allow us to investigate how exploding stars create and disperse the heavier elements on which life depends.

"Chandra will help to confirm one of the most fascinating theories of modern science - that we came from the stars," said Professor Robert Kirshner of Harvard University.

"Its ability to make X-ray images of comparable quality to optical images will have an impact on virtually every area of astronomy."



News image


Advanced options | Search tips


News image
News image
News imageBack to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage |
News image

News imageNews imageNews image
Sci/Tech Contents
News image
News imageNews image
Relevant Stories
News image
23 Jul 99�|�Sci/Tech
Shuttle deploys X-ray observatory
News image
23 Jul 99�|�Sci/Tech
Third time lucky for Columbia
News image
20 Jul 99�|�Sci/Tech
Shuttle carrying great X-ray observatory
News image

News image
News image
News image
News imageInternet Links
News image
News imageNews image
Chandra X-ray telescope
News image
News imageNews image
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

News image
News image
News image
News imageIn this section
News image
World's smallest transistor
News image
Scientists join forces to study Arctic ozone
News image
Mathematicians crack big puzzle
News image
From Business
The growing threat of internet fraud
News image
Who watches the pilots?
News image
From Health
Cold 'cure' comes one step closer
News image

News image
News image
News image