New technology is allowing NASA to take a second look at the remnants of an exploded star, revealing a mysterious hand in the debris.
The findings were a result of re-examining previously viewed images of the dust from an exploding star using NASA’s Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR.) By revealing high energy blue x-rays, NuSTAR “is showing us well-studied objects and regions in a whole new light,” says Fiona Harrison of the California Institute of Technology.
Though already being referred to as “The Hand of God”, the phenomenon is more likely to be a pulsar wind nebula–debris displaced from an exploding star that then interacts with nearby magnetic fields.
If the phenomenon is in fact a result of divine intervention (we’re not counting on it), we may soon have more Godly Body Parts to contend with. SBW2007, a nebula with a star at its center, is predicted to go supernova soon, and we’ll be fascinated to see what new technology like NuSTAR can uncover once the dust settles. Here’s hoping for a heavenly handshake.
(via Space.com, photo credit via Nick Rose and Universe Today)
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Published: Jan 10, 2014 05:59 pm