An X-ray of the Whirlpool
July 23, 2003
The Whirlpool Galaxy, M51, seen in visible light (left) and as seen by the Chandra X-ray observatory (right) at the same scale and orientation.
Chandra image courtesy NASA/CXC/University of Maryland./A.Wilson. NOAO image courtesy NOAO/AURA/NSF/T.A.Rector and Monica Ramirez.
Now Andrew Wilson (University of Maryland) and his colleagues using the Chandra X-ray Observatory have, quite literally, looked at this classic in an entirely different light. Imaging the galaxy in X-rays, Chandra revealed a galactic core brimming with high-energy objects including black holes, neutron stars in binary systems, and multimillion degree gas. Also visible was a rare supernova nestled behind a dusty veil.
The supernova in question is SN1994I, now eight years old. It was a rare breed of stellar explosion known as Type Ic. Unlike most supernovae, before their violent explosions type Ic objects shed their outer layers of hydrogen much the same way a planetary nebula does. In this case, the supernova is surrounded by a star-debris cloud 0.2 light-year in diameter. Monitoring the cloud will reveal just how much mass the star gave up before it blew up.






