File:Nova remnant GK Per (the Firework Nebula) (noao-gkper).tiff

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Original file(1,010 × 680 pixels, file size: 1.99 MB, MIME type: image/tiff)

Captions

Captions

This picture is a combination of several exposures taken on the night of October 11th 1994 (UT of observation 12/10/94:10:04 to 10:34) with the NOAO/STIS/Tektronix 1024x1024 CCD detector on the WIYN 3.5m telescope.

Summary

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Description
English: This picture is a combination of several exposures taken on the night of October 11th 1994 (UT of observation 12/10/94:10:04 to 10:34) with the NOAO/STIS/Tektronix 1024x1024 CCD detector on the WIYN 3.5m telescope. At the focal plane of the WIYN, this detector has a sampling scale of 0.2 arc seconds per pixel. Images were taken through three different filters approximating red (three exposures for a total of four-and-a-half minutes), blue (three, total six minutes) and green (three, total six minutes). The individual colors were aligned and combined in the computer to create this (approximately) true color picture. The photograph shows a region 120 arc seconds square, and the approximate "seeing" is 1.0 arc seconds. About this object The unusual nova shell GK Per is the result of Nova Persei 1901, a nova which exploded in 1901 about 1500 light-years away in the direction of the constellation Perseus. Classical novae, nowadays categorized as cataclysmic variables, normally comprise a hot white dwarf with accretion disk, and a cool mass-transferring companion. At some point, hydrogen burning triggers thermonuclear runaway in the accreted matter, leading to an explosive shock wave and an expanding shell. The first bright nova of the 20th century and the first to be subjected to detailed spectroscopy and photometry, Nova Persei 1901 reached a maximum brightness of 0.2m and declined very rapidly thereafter to its current minimum of 13.1. GK Per is unique among classical novae, having the longest known period (almost two days) and showing dwarf nova-like outbursts of about 3 mag. It also contains an evolved secondary (type K2IV), while all others have main sequence companions. Expanding nebulosity was detected as early as 1902, and apparent superlight speeds were explained as reflection from dust grains, which has only been seen in one other nova. The ejecta show an asymmetry unique among novae, contain as much as one ten-thousandth of a solar mass, and have speeds reaching 1200 km/s. The unusual features of this `firework burst' nebula are best explained by expansion into an interstellar medium that is considerably denser than the average, although it is not yet clear why this should be so. Location: 03 27 47.4 +43 44 05 (1950.0), distance 1500 light-years, size about 0.7 light-years (this piece: structures associated with this nova stretch some twenty times farther out).
Date 30 June 2020, 21:34:00 (upload date) Taken on 12 October 1994
Source Nova remnant GK Per (the Firework Nebula)
Author N.A.Sharp/WIYN/NOIRLab/NSF
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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current19:18, 17 September 2023Thumbnail for version as of 19:18, 17 September 20231,010 × 680 (1.99 MB)OptimusPrimeBot (talk | contribs)#Spacemedia - Upload of https://noirlab.edu/public/media/archives/images/original/noao-gkper.tif via Commons:Spacemedia

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