Credit: E. Aliu et al. (The VERITAS Collaboration), Science 334: 69, 2011
More from the Crab
Just when it was thought the Crab couldn't get any stranger, it has. The Crab, to remind you, is the remnant of a star which was observed to explode as a supernova in A. D. 1054 and which consists of an ornate, bright nebula surrounding a neutron star which spins 30 times per second. Radiation from the neutron star's magnetic poles produces a flash of light each time the star spins around. The Crab Pulsar is known to produce flashes of radio radiation, optical light and X-rays. Now, a set of ground-based gamma-ray telescopes called VERITAS has shown that the Crab's pulsations extend at least up to Gamma-ray energies. VERITAS, the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System, consists of four 12-meter optical reflectors which work by detecting Cherenkov radiation produced as a high energy gamma-ray or superfast particle hits the earth's upper atmosphere. The figure above shows the pulsed Gamma-ray emission from the Crab detected by VERITAS.
This is first time very-high-energy gamma rays have ever been detected from a pulsar and indicates that the emission originates at a distance of more than 10 times the neutron star's radius (which is only about 10 kilometers, roughly the size of the Washington DC beltway). This high-energy pulsation detected by VERITAS cannot be explained on the basis of present pulsar models.
Published: October 17, 2011
<
HEA Dictionary ● Archive
● Search HEAPOW
● Other Languages
● HEAPOW on Facebook
● Download all Images
● Education ● HEAD
>
Each week the HEASARC
brings you new, exciting and beautiful images from X-ray and Gamma ray
astronomy. Check back each week and be sure to check out the HEAPOW archive!
Page Author: Dr. Michael F. Corcoran
Last modified Monday, 26-Feb-2024 17:21:01 EST