SN Refsdal: The First Predicted Supernova Image
Image Credit:
NASA,
ESA, and
S. Rodney
(JHU) and the FrontierSN team;
T. Treu
(UCLA),
P. Kelly (UC Berkeley), and the GLASS team;
J. Lotz (STScI) and the
Frontier Fields team;
M. Postman
(STScI) and the
CLASH team; and
Z. Levay
(STScI)
It's back.
Never before has an observed supernova been predicted.
The unique astronomical event
occurred in the field of galaxy cluster MACS J1149.5+2223.
Most bright spots in the
featured image are galaxies in this cluster.
The actual supernova, dubbed
Supernova Refsdal,
occurred just once far across the universe and well behind this massive galaxy cluster.
Gravity caused the cluster to act as a massive
gravitational lens,
splitting the image of Supernova Refsdal into
multiple bright images.
One of these images arrived at Earth about ten years ago, likely in the upper red circle, and was missed.
Four more bright images
peaked in April in the lowest red circle, spread around a massive galaxy in the cluster as the first
Einstein Cross supernova.
But there was more.
Analyses revealed that a sixth bright
supernova image was likely still on its way to Earth and likely to arrive within the next year.
Earlier this month -- right on schedule -- this sixth bright image was
recovered,
in the middle red circle, as predicted.
Studying image sequences like this help humanity to understand how matter is distributed in
galaxies and clusters, how
fast the universe expands,
and how massive
stars explode.