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A small, dense object only twelve miles in diameter is responsible for this
beautiful X-ray nebula that spans 150 light years. At the center of this image
made by NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory is a very young and powerful pulsar,
known as PSR B1509-58, or B1509 for short. The pulsar is a rapidly spinning
neutron star which is spewing energy out into the space around it to create
complex and intriguing structures, including one that resembles a large cosmic
hand.
In this image, the lowest energy X-rays that Chandra detects are red, the medium
range is green, and the most energetic ones are colored blue. Astronomers think
that B1509 is about 1,700 years old and is located about 17,000 light years
away.
Neutron stars are created when massive stars run out of fuel and collapse. B1509
is spinning completely around almost 7 times every second and is releasing
energy into its environment at a prodigious rate -- presumably because it has an
intense magnetic field at its surface, estimated to be 15 trillion times
stronger than the Earth’s magnetic field.
The combination of rapid rotation and ultra-strong magnetic field makes B1509
one of the most powerful electromagnetic generators in the Galaxy. This
generator drives an energetic wind of electrons and ions away from the neutron
star. As the electrons move through the magnetized nebula, they radiate away
their energy and create the elaborate nebula seen by Chandra.
In the innermost regions, a faint circle surrounds the pulsar, and marks the
spot where the wind is rapidly decelerated by the slowly expanding nebula. In
this way, B1509 shares some striking similarities to the famous Crab Nebula.
However B1509's nebula is 15 times wider than the Crab's diameter of 10 light
years.
Finger-like structures extend to the north, apparently energizing knots of
material in a neighboring gas cloud known as RCW 89. The transfer of energy from
the wind to these knots makes them glow brightly in X-rays (orange and red
features to the upper right). The temperature in this region appears to vary in
a circular pattern around this ring of emission, suggesting that the pulsar may
be precessing like a spinning top and sweeping an energizing beam around the gas
in RCW 89.
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the Chandra
program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The Smithsonian
Astrophysical Observatory controls Chandra's science and flight operations from
Cambridge, Mass.
Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/P. Slane et al.