X-ray Image Credit: NASA / CXC / ISDC / L. Pavan et al.
Explanation: The Lighthouse
nebula was formed by the wind of a pulsar, a rapidly rotating, magnetized
neutron star, as it speeds through the interstellar medium at over 1,000
kilometers per second. Some 23,000 light-years distant toward the
southern constellation Carina, pulsar and wind nebula (cataloged as IGR
J1104-6103) are indicated at the lower right in this remarkable
image from the Chandra X-ray Observatory.
Energetic particles generated by the pulsar are
swept back into the wind's comet-like tail trailing up and to the left, along
the direction of the pulsar's motion away from its parent supernova remnant.
Both runaway pulsar and expanding remnant debris field are the aftermath of the
core-collapse-explosion
of a massive star, with the pulsar kicked out by the supernova explosion. Adding
to the scene of exotic cosmic extremes is a long, spiraling jet extending for
almost 37 light-years, but nearly at a right angle to the pulsar's motion. The
high-energy particle jet is the longest known for
any object in our Milky Way galaxy.
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