Light Echoes Reveal Exploded Stars

Light Echoes Reveal Exploded Stars
Artist's concept of a light echo from a supernova that exploded in the nearby galaxy called the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), as seen from Earth more than two centuries after the original explosion. The echo is only part of a ring, because to be seen it must intersect with existing clouds of interstellar dust far from the explosion, which are not spaced equally within the large volume that the supernova light continues to expand into. P. Marenfeld and NOAO/AURA/NSF (Image credit: NULL)

Using recently discovered faint light echoes, astronomers have divined when three known supernovas occurred.

The visible echoes are described as being much like sound echoes. They're created when light from the explosion expands outward and reflects off dust and travels toward Earth.

"Without the geometry of the light echo, we had no way of knowing just how old these supernovae were," said lead researcher Armin Rest of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO). "Some relatively simple mathematics can help us answer one of the most vexing problems that astronomers can ask--exactly how old is this object that we are looking at?"

It is not the first light echo ever seen. Astronomers have seen one around a well known dead star called Cassiopeia A and, in a remarkable animation, around another object that's not well understood.

"Imagine seeing light from the same explosion first seen by Johannes Kepler some 400 years ago, or the one recorded by Chinese observers in 1006," said Christopher Stubbs of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA). "These light echoes give us that possibility."

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