For the first time, astronomers have measured and mapped polarized X-rays from the remains of an exploded star, using NASA’s Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE). The findings, which come from observations of a stellar remnant called Cassiopeia A, shed new light on the nature of young supernova remnants, which accelerate particles close to the speed of light.
Launched on Dec. 9, 2021, IXPE, a
collaboration between NASA and the Italian Space Agency, is the first satellite
that can measure the polarization of X-ray light with this level of sensitivity
and clarity.
All forms of light – from radio waves to
gamma rays – can be polarized. Unlike the polarized sunglasses we use to cut
the glare from sunlight bouncing off a wet road or windshield, IXPE’s detectors
maps the tracks of incoming X-ray light. Scientists can use these individual
track records to figure out the polarization, which tells the story of what the
X-rays went through.
Composite
images of the Cas A supernova remnant, a structure resulting from the explosion
of a star in the Cassiopeia constellation. The blues represent data from the
Chandra Observatory, the turquoise is from NASA's Imaging X-ray Polarimetry
Explorer (called IXPE), and the gold is courtesy of the Hubble Telescope. Credits:
X-ray: Chandra: NASA/CXC/SAO, IXPE: NASA/MSFC/J. Vink et al.; Optical:
NASA/STScI
Cassiopeia A (Cas A for short) was the first object IXPE observed after it began
collecting data. One of the reasons Cas A was selected is that its
shock waves – like a sonic boom generated by a jet – are some of the fastest in
the Milky Way. The shock waves were generated by the supernova explosion that
destroyed a massive star after it collapsed. Light from the blast swept past
Earth more than three hundred years ago.
“Without IXPE, we have been missing
crucial information about objects like Cas A,” said Pat Slane at the Center for
Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, who leads the IXPE investigations of
supernova remnants. “This result is teaching us about a fundamental aspect of
the debris from this exploded star – the behavior of its magnetic fields.”
Magnetic fields, which are invisible, push
and pull on moving charged particles like protons and electrons. Closer to
home, they are responsible for keeping magnets stuck to a kitchen fridge. Under
extreme conditions, such as an exploded star, magnetic fields can boost these
particles to near-light-speed.
Despite their super-fast speeds, particles
swept up by shock waves in Cas A do not fly away from the supernova remnant
because they are trapped by magnetic fields in the wake of the shocks. The
particles are forced to spiral around the magnetic field lines, and the
electrons give off an intense kind of light called “synchrotron radiation,”
which is polarized.
By studying the polarization of this
light, scientists can “reverse engineer” what’s happening inside Cas A at very
small scales – details that are difficult or impossible to observe in other
ways. The angle of polarization tells us about the direction of these magnetic
fields. If the magnetic fields close to the shock fronts are very tangled, the
chaotic mix of radiation from regions with different magnetic field directions
will give off a smaller amount of polarization.
Previous studies of Cas A with radio
telescopes have shown that the radio synchrotron radiation is produced in
regions across almost the entire supernova remnant. Astronomers found that only
a small amount of the radio waves were polarized – about 5%. They also
determined that the magnetic field is oriented radially, like the spokes of a
wheel, spreading out from near the center of the remnant towards the
edge.
Data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray
Observatory, on the other hand, show that the X-ray synchrotron radiation
mainly comes from thin regions along the shocks, near the circular outer rim of
the remnant, where the magnetic fields were predicted to align with the
shocks. Chandra and IXPE use different kinds of detectors and have
different levels of angular resolution, or sharpness. Launched in 1999,
Chandra’s first science image was also of Cas A.
Before IXPE, scientists predicted X-ray
polarization would be produced by magnetic fields that are perpendicular to
magnetic fields observed by radio telescopes.
Instead, IXPE data show that the magnetic
fields in X-rays tend to be aligned in radial directions even very close to the
shock fronts. The X-rays also reveal a lower amount of polarization than radio
observations showed, which suggests that the X-rays come from turbulent regions
with a mix of many different magnetic field directions.
"These IXPE results were not what we
expected, but as scientists we love being surprised,” says Dr. Jacco Vink of
the University of Amsterdam and lead author of the paper describing the IXPE
results on Cas A. “The fact that a smaller percentage of the X-ray light is
polarized is a very interesting – and previously undetected – property of Cas
A.”
The IXPE result for Cas A is whetting the
appetite for more observations of supernova remnants that are currently
underway. Scientists expect each new observed object will reveal new answers –
and pose even more questions – about these important objects that seed the
Universe with critical elements.
This
graphic combines data from NASA's Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE)
with an X-ray image from Chandra (blue) and a view in optical light from Hubble
(gold) of the Cassiopeia A (Cas A) supernova remnant. The lines in this graphic
come from IXPE measurements that show the direction of the magnetic field
across regions of the remnant. Green lines indicate regions where the
measurements are most highly significant. These results indicate that the
magnetic field lines near the outskirts of Cas A are largely oriented radially,
i.e., in a direction from the center of the remnant outwards. The IXPE
observations also reveal that the magnetic field over small regions is highly
tangled, without a dominant preferred direction. Credits: X-ray: Chandra:
NASA/CXC/SAO; IXPE: NASA/MSFC/J. Vink et al.;
“This study enshrines all the novelties
that IXPE brings to astrophysics,” said Dr. Riccardo Ferrazzoli with the
Italian National Institute for Astrophysics/Institute for Space Astrophysics
and Planetology in Rome. “Not only did we obtain information on X-ray
polarization properties for the first time for these sources, but we also know
how these change in different regions of the supernova. As the first target of
the IXPE observation campaign, Cas A provided an astrophysical 'laboratory' to
test all the techniques and analysis tools that the team has developed in
recent years.”
“These results provide a unique view of
the environment necessary to accelerate electrons to incredibly high
energies," said co-author Dmitry Prokhorov, also of the University of
Amsterdam. “We are just at the beginning of this detective story, but so far
the IXPE data are providing new leads for us to track down.”
IXPE is a collaboration between NASA and the Italian Space Agency with partners and science collaborators in 12 countries. Ball Aerospace, headquartered in Broomfield, Colorado, manages spacecraft operations together with the University of Colorado's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space sciences, which operates IXPE for NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/ixpe/index.html
Source: NASA’S IXPE Helps Unlock the Secrets
of Famous Exploded Star | NASA
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