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The Classical Nova GK Persei
الشرح: This composite image shows the aftermath of a stellar explosion known as a nova, specifically the remnant of a classical nova called GK Persei. A nova occurs when a very dense star called a white dwarf pulls hydrogen-rich gas from a companion star in a binary system until the accumulated material ignites in a powerful thermonuclear explosion. This sudden release of energy sweeps material outward and produces bright X-ray, optical, and radio emission that can be studied long after the blast.
GK Persei was for a very short time in 1901 one of the brightest stars in the sky. Classical novae like GK Persei temporarily brighten dramatically — sometimes to thousands of times their usual luminosity — before fading over months or years as the expanding shell moves through space. In this image taken over 100 years since the nova's 1901 brightening, X-rays (shown in blue) reveal very hot gas left behind by the explosion, optical data (yellow) show clumps of matter ejected from the star’s surface, and radio information (pink) highlights high-energy electrons energized by the expanding nova shock wave. Studying novae helps scientists learn about how stars interact in binary systems and how powerful bursts of energy shape the material around them.
The nature of the pink blob in the lower left is not known.
المصدر: X-ray: NASA/CXC/RIKEN/D.Takei et al; Optical: NASA/STScI; Radio: NRAO/VLA
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License: PD الملكية العامة أيقونات



