
While scanning the sky to measure the positions and movements of stars in our Galaxy, Gaia has discovered its first stellar explosion in another galaxy far, far away.
While scanning the sky to measure the positions and movements of stars in our Galaxy, Gaia has discovered its first stellar explosion in another galaxy far, far away.
As Gaia goes back to each patch of the sky over and over, we have a chance to spot thousands of 鈥榞uest stars鈥 on the celestial tapestry
Simon Hodgkin
This powerful event, now named Gaia14aaa, took place in a distant galaxy some 500 million light-years away, and was revealed via a sudden rise in the galaxy鈥檚 brightness between two Gaia observations separated by one month.
Gaia, which began its scientific work in July, repeatedly scans the entire sky, so that each of the roughly one billion stars in the final catalogue will be examined an average of 70 times over the next five years.
鈥淭his kind of repeated survey comes in handy for studying the changeable nature of the sky,鈥 said Simon Hodgkin from the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 Institute of Astronomy, who is part of Gaia鈥檚 Science Alert Team.
Many astronomical sources are variable: some exhibit a regular pattern, with a periodically rising and declining brightness, while others may undergo sudden and dramatic changes.
鈥淎s Gaia goes back to each patch of the sky over and over, we have a chance to spot thousands of 鈥榞uest stars鈥 on the celestial tapestry,鈥 said Hodgkin. 鈥淭hese transient sources can be signposts to some of the most powerful phenomena in the Universe, like this supernova.鈥
Gaia鈥檚 Science Alert Team includes astronomers from the Universities of Cambridge and Warsaw, who are combing through the scans in search of unexpected changes.
It did not take long until they found the first 鈥榓nomaly鈥 in the form of a sudden spike in the light coming from a distant galaxy, detected on August 30th. 探花直播same galaxy appeared much dimmer when Gaia first looked at it just a month before.
鈥淲e immediately thought it might be a supernova, but needed more clues to back up our claim,鈥 explains 艁ukasz Wyrzykowski from the Warsaw 探花直播 Astronomical Observatory.
Other powerful cosmic events may resemble a supernova in a distant galaxy, such as outbursts caused by the mass-devouring supermassive black hole at the galaxy centre.
However, in Gaia14aaa, the position of the bright spot of light was slightly offset from the galaxy鈥檚 core, suggesting that it was unlikely to be related to a central black hole.
探花直播astronomers looked for more information in the light of this new source. Besides recording the position and brightness of stars and galaxies, Gaia also splits their light to create a spectrum. In fact, Gaia uses two prisms spanning red and blue wavelength regions to produce a low-resolution spectrum that allows astronomers to seek signatures of the various chemical elements present in the source of that light.
鈥淚n the spectrum of this source, we could already see the presence of iron and other elements that are known to be found in supernovas,鈥 said Nadejda Blagorodnova, a PhD student at the Institute of Astronomy.
In addition, the blue part of the spectrum appears significantly brighter than the red part, as expected in a supernova. And not just any supernova: the astronomers already suspected it might be a 鈥楾ype Ia鈥 supernova 鈥 the explosion of a white dwarf locked in a binary system with a companion star.
While other types of supernovas are the explosive demises of massive stars, several times more massive than the Sun, Type Ia supernovas are the end product of their less massive counterparts.
Low-mass stars, with masses similar to the Sun鈥檚, end their lives gently, puffing up their outer layers and leaving behind a compact white dwarf. Their high density means that white dwarfs can exert an intense gravitational pull on a nearby companion star, accreting mass from it until the white dwarf reaches a critical mass that then sparks a violent explosion.
To confirm the nature of this supernova, the astronomers complemented the Gaia data with more observations from the ground, using the Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) and the robotic Liverpool Telescope on La Palma, in the Canary Islands.
A high-resolution spectrum, obtained on September 3rd with the INT, confirmed not only that the explosion corresponds to a Type Ia supernova, but also provided an estimate of its distance. This proved that the supernova happened in the galaxy where it was observed.
鈥淭his is the first supernova in what we expect to be a long series of discoveries with Gaia,鈥 said Dr听Timo Prusti, ESA鈥檚 Gaia Project Scientist.
Supernovas are rare events: only a couple of these explosions happen every century in a typical galaxy. But they are not so rare over the whole sky, if we take into account the hundreds of billions of galaxies that populate the Universe.
Astronomers in the Science Alert Team are currently getting acquainted with the data, testing and optimising their detection software. In a few months, they expect Gaia to discover about three new supernovas every day.
In addition to supernovas, Gaia will discover thousands of transient sources of other kinds 鈥 stellar explosions on smaller scale than supernovas, flares from young stars coming to life, outbursts caused by black holes that disrupt and devour a nearby star, and possibly some entirely new phenomena never seen before.
鈥 探花直播sky is ablaze with peculiar sources of light, and we are looking forward to probing plenty of those with Gaia in the coming years,鈥 said Prusti.
Adapted from European Space Agency .
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