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Seminar

An Astronomical Time Machine: Light Echoes from Historic Supernovae and Eruptions

April 18, 2013

When: April 18, 2013 3:30PM

Armin Rest

Space Telescope Science Institute

 Tycho Brahe's observations of a supernova in 1572 challenged the dogma that the celestial realm was unchanging.  438 years later we have once again seen the light that Tycho saw: some of the light from the 1572 supernova is reflected off dust and is only now reaching Earth.  These light echoes, as well as ones detected from other historic events like SN 87A, Cas A and Eta Carinae's Great Eruption, give us a very rare opportunity in astronomy: direct observation of the cause (the explosion/eruption) and the effect (the remnant) of the same astronomical event.  Furthermore, in some cases we can compare light echoes at different angles around a remnant, and thus investigate possible asymmetry in the explosion.  I will discuss how the unprecedented view at these exciting events with light echoes allows us to unravel some of their secrets.

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