Light Echoes Allow an Insight into the Active Past of Cassiopeia A

Research report (imported) 2006 - Max Planck Institute for Astronomy

Authors
Krause, Oliver; Birkmann, Stephan; Quanz, Sascha
Departments
Stern- und Planetenentstehung (Prof. Dr. Thomas Henning)
MPI für Astronomie, Heidelberg
Summary
Cassiopeia A is the youngest known supernova remnant in our Galaxy. Although unrecorded at the time, it must have exploded around 1680. The nebula, lying at a distance of about 11000 light years, is one of the best-studied celestial objects. Astronomers succeeded in detecting light echoes in the infrared range around the supernova remnant. These originate from interstellar dust that was heated by the flash of the supernova explosion and by flares of the central neutron star.

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