Vela Supernova Remnant in X-ray
What happens when a
star explodes? A huge fireball of hot
gas shoots out
in all directions. When this gas slams into the existing
interstellar medium,
it heats up so much it glows in
X-rays. The
above
picture by the
ROSAT satellite has captured some of these X-rays and shown -- for the
first time -- the
Vela supernova
explosion was roughly spherical.
Non-uniformity of the interstellar medium causes Vela's appearance to be
irregular. The size of this X-ray emitting spherical shell is immense -
230 light years across, covering over 100 times the sky-area of the full
Moon. The
supernova
that created this nebula occurred about 1500 light
years away and about 11,000 years ago. Coincidently, a completely different
supernova shell can also be seen in X-rays in this picture! It is visible
as the bright patch near the upper right. This
Puppis supernova remnant nebula is actually about four times farther
than the Vela nebula.