Imágenes asociadas
24 de Julio, 2008
Una explosión silenciosa

 

NGC 2770, SN 2007uy and SN 2008D.

[Preview - JPEG: 400 x 578 pix - 56k]
[Normal - JPEG: 800 x 1155 pix - 695k]
[Full Res - JPEG: 1195 x 1725 pix - 1.1M]
[Full Res - TIFF: 1195 x 1725 pix - 6.2M]


The spiral galaxy NGC 2770 and its two supernovae as observed at the Asiago Observatory. The image was obtained on 12 January 2008 and shows the then fading SN 2007uy and the newly discovered SN 2008D.

 

NGC 2770 and its 2 supernovae.

[Preview - JPEG: 800 x 400 pix - 60k]
[Normal - JPEG: 1600 x 800 pix - 647k]
[Full Res - JPEG: 4400 x 2200 pix - 3M]
[Full Res - TIFF: 4400 x 2200 pix - 29M]
Without text:
[Full Res - TIFF: 4400 x 2200 pix - 29M]
Animation:
[Animated GIF - 37M]
[Small Quicktime - 6M]
[Quicktime - 24M]


Images at three different epochs of the spiral galaxy NGC 2770, located 90 million light-years away towards the Lynx constellation, observed from the Asiago Observatory. The first image on 6 January 2008 reveals only the fading supernova SN 2007uy, which was discovered at the end of 2007. The second image, taken 6 days later, shows the newly discovered supernova SN 2008D. It is very rare for two supernovae to happen at the same time in a galaxy, as a supernova on average happens only once every hundred years. The last one to have been seen in our Milky Way dates back from 1604. The third image, taken almost a month later, still shows the two supernovae. SN 2007uy has faded, while SN 2008D brightened. The small animation shows an interpolation between these three images.