For the first time, scientists have made a clear X-ray detection of chlorine and potassium in the wreckage of a star using data from the Japan-led XRISM (X-ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission) spacecraft.
The Resolve instrument aboard XRISM,
pronounced “crism,” discovered these elements in a supernova remnant called
Cassiopeia A or Cas A, for short. The expanding cloud of debris is located
about 11,000 light-years away in the northern constellation Cassiopeia.
“This discovery helps illustrate how the
deaths of stars and life on Earth are fundamentally linked,” said Toshiki Sato,
an astrophysicist at Meiji University in Tokyo.
“Stars appear to shimmer quietly in the night sky, but they actively forge
materials that form planets and enable life as we know it. Now, thanks to
XRISM, we have a better idea of when and how stars might make crucial, yet
harder-to-find, elements.”
A paper about the result published Dec. 4
in Nature Astronomy. Sato led the study with Kai Matsunaga and Hiroyuki Uchida,
both at Kyoto
University in Japan. JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration
Agency) leads XRISM in collaboration with
NASA, along with contributions from ESA (European Space Agency). NASA and JAXA also
codeveloped the Resolve instrument.
Observations of the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant by
the Resolve instrument aboard the NASA-JAXA XRISM (X-ray Imaging and
Spectroscopy Mission) spacecraft revealed strong evidence for potassium (green
squares) in the southeast and northern parts of the remnant. Grids superposed
on a multiwavelength image of the remnant represent the fields of view of two
Resolve measurements made in December 2023. Each square represents one pixel of
Resolve’s detector. Weaker evidence of potassium (yellow squares) in the west
suggests that the original star may have had underlying asymmetries before it
exploded.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center; X-ray:
NASA/CXC/SAO; Optical: NASA/ESA/STScI; IR: NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI/Milisavljevic et
al., NASA/JPL/CalTech; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/J. Schmidt and K. Arcand
Stars produce almost all the elements in
the universe heavier than hydrogen and helium through nuclear reactions. Heat
and pressure fuse lighter ones, like carbon, into progressively heavier ones,
like neon, creating onion-like layers of materials in stellar interiors.
Nuclear reactions also take place during
explosive events like supernovae, which occur when stars run out of fuel, collapse, and explode.
Elemental abundances and locations in the wreckage can, respectively, tell
scientists about the star and its explosion, even after hundreds or thousands
of years.
Some elements — like oxygen, carbon, and
neon — are more common than others and are easier to detect and trace back to a
particular part of the star’s life.
Other elements — like chlorine and
potassium — are more elusive. Since scientists have less data about them, it’s
more difficult to model where in the star they formed. These rarer elements
still play important roles in life on Earth. Potassium, for example, helps the cells and
muscles in our bodies function, so astronomers are interested in tracing its
cosmic origins.
The roughly circular Cas A supernova
remnant spans about 10 light-years, is over 340 years old, and has a superdense
neutron star at its center — the remains of the original star's core.
Scientists using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory had previously identified signatures of iron, silicon,
sulfur, and other elements within Cas A.
In the hunt for other elements, the team used the Resolve instrument aboard XRISM to look at the remnant twice in December 2023. The researchers were able to pick out the signatures for chlorine and potassium, determining that the remnant contains ratios much higher than expected. Resolve also detected a possible indication of phosphorous, which was previously discovered in Cas A by infrared missions.
Watch to learn more about how the Resolve
instrument aboard XRISM captures extraordinary data on the make-up of galaxy
clusters, exploded stars, and more using only 36 pixels.
Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
“Resolve’s high resolution and
sensitivity make these kinds of measurements possible,” said Brian Williams,
the XRISM project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “Combining XRISM’s
capabilities with those of other missions allows scientists to detect and
measure these rare elements that are so critical to the formation of life in
the universe.”
The astronomers think stellar
activity could have disrupted the layers of nuclear fusion inside the star
before it exploded. That kind of upheaval might have led to persistent,
large-scale churning of material inside the star that created conditions where
chlorine and potassium formed in abundance.
The scientists also mapped the
Resolve observations onto an image of Cas A captured by Chandra and showed that
the elements were concentrated in the southeast and northern parts of the
remnant.
This lopsided distribution may mean
that the star itself had underlying asymmetries before it exploded, which
Chandra data indicated earlier this year in a study Sato led.
“Being able to make measurements
with good statistical precision of these rarer elements really helps us
understand the nuclear fusion that goes on in stars before and during
supernovae,” said co-author Paul Plucinsky, an astrophysicist at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard &
Smithsonian in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “We suspected a key part might be
asymmetry, and now we have more evidence that’s the case. But there’s still a
lot we just don’t understand about how stars explode and distribute all these
elements across the cosmos.”
By Jeanette Kazmierczak
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight
Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA-JAXA XRISM Finds Elemental Bounty in Supernova Remnant - NASA Science

