Absolute Beginner
Stars can explode. When a very big star explodes, we call it a supernova. Some supernovae are much brighter than normal. Scientists call these superluminous supernovae.
A magnetar is a special kind of dead star. It spins very fast and has a very strong magnetic field. Scientists thought magnetars might power the brightest explosions in space.
A space telescope called Fermi looks for gamma rays. Gamma rays are a kind of invisible light. They carry a lot of energy.
Scientists found gamma rays coming from a very bright explosion far away. The explosion was called SN 2017egm. It happened about 440 million light-years from Earth.
Finding these gamma rays was very hard. Scientists waited almost 20 years. Now they have proof that magnetars can power the biggest stellar explosions we know.
- supernova
- a big explosion when a large star dies
- superluminous
- extremely bright, much brighter than normal
- magnetar
- a dead star that spins fast and has a very strong magnetic field
- gamma ray
- a very energetic kind of invisible light from space
- telescope
- a tool scientists use to look at faraway objects in space
- light-year
- the distance light travels in one year, used to measure space
- magnetic field
- an invisible force around a magnet or a magnetar
- proof
- evidence that shows something is true
Elementary
For nearly two decades, astronomers have debated what gives superluminous supernovae their extraordinary brightness. These explosions can outshine an entire galaxy for several weeks.
One popular idea is the magnetar engine theory. A magnetar is a neutron star that rotates hundreds of times per second and has the strongest magnetic field known in nature. As it spins down, it releases enormous amounts of energy into the surrounding gas cloud.
The NASA Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope was designed to detect high-energy gamma rays from space. Scientists aimed it at known superluminous supernovae, waiting for a gamma-ray signal that would confirm the magnetar theory.
The signal arrived from SN 2017egm, a superluminous supernova in a galaxy called NGC 3191, located about 440 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Ursa Major.
Researchers at Louisiana State University measured the signal at 4.7 sigma above the background noise after correcting for the many different supernovae they tested. In science, 5 sigma is the gold standard for a discovery, so 4.7 sigma is very strong evidence.
- astronomer
- a scientist who studies stars, galaxies, and other objects in space
- neutron star
- a very small, extremely dense dead star formed after a supernova explosion
- magnetar engine
- the idea that a spinning magnetar provides the power for a superluminous supernova
- rotate
- to spin around a central point
- sigma
- a unit used in science to measure how certain a result is
- constellation
- a named pattern of stars as seen from Earth
- background noise
- random signals that are always present and can hide a real result
- galaxy
- a huge collection of billions of stars, gas, and dust held together by gravity
Intermediate
Superluminous supernovae are roughly 100 times brighter than ordinary core-collapse supernovae and can outshine their host galaxies for weeks. Since their discovery in the early 2000s, astrophysicists have struggled to identify a single energy source capable of sustaining such luminosity.
The leading theoretical framework, proposed by Daniel Kasen and Lars Bildsten in 2010, argues that a rapidly rotating millisecond magnetar formed at the core of the dying star transfers its rotational energy into the expanding ejecta through electromagnetic coupling, amplifying the brightness far beyond what radioactive nickel-56 decay alone could produce.
The NASA Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, launched in 2008, was positioned to test this prediction. As the magnetar spins down, the Kasen-Bildsten model forecasts a hard X-ray and gamma-ray component that should escape through the outer ejecta shell and reach Fermi's Large Area Telescope detector.
After stacking data from multiple observed superluminous supernovae over nearly 20 years, a team led by Louisiana State University detected a statistically significant excess from SN 2017egm, a hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova in NGC 3191 at a redshift of roughly z = 0.03, corresponding to approximately 440 million light-years.
The detection stands at 4.7 sigma after applying a trials correction for the number of candidate events examined. While just below the formal 5-sigma discovery threshold, the result is being treated by the community as effectively confirmatory of the magnetar engine hypothesis and is expected to prompt pointed follow-up observations with the Cherenkov Telescope Array.
- millisecond magnetar
- a neutron star that completes a full rotation in under one millisecond, radiating intense energy
- ejecta
- the material expelled outward from a star during a supernova explosion
- electromagnetic coupling
- the transfer of energy from a rotating magnetic field to surrounding matter
- nickel-56 decay
- the radioactive breakdown of nickel-56 produced in supernovae, which powers ordinary supernova brightness
- trials correction
- a statistical adjustment that accounts for testing many hypotheses simultaneously, reducing false-positive risk
- redshift
- the stretching of light to longer wavelengths caused by an object moving away from us, used to measure cosmic distance
- Cherenkov Telescope Array
- a next-generation ground-based observatory designed to detect very high-energy gamma rays
- stacking
- combining data from multiple observations to improve statistical sensitivity
Advanced
Superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) occupy the extreme luminosity tail of stellar transients, routinely exceeding 10^44 ergs per second at peak and sustaining optical emission over timescales of weeks to months that are incompatible with the canonical radioactive nickel-56 powering chain. Their volumetric rate, estimated at roughly 10^-4 per comoving megaparsec per year in the local universe, nevertheless makes them detectable with wide-field time-domain surveys.
The magnetar central-engine model, formulated by Kasen and Bildsten in 2010 and extended by Metzger and collaborators, attributes the excess luminosity to magnetic dipole spindown radiation from a nascent millisecond magnetar. The magnetar's rotational energy reservoir, potentially exceeding 10^52 ergs for spin periods below 2 milliseconds, couples to the expanding ejecta through the nebular magnetosphere, thermalizing at optical wavelengths but also leaking a hard non-thermal component in the X-ray and MeV gamma-ray bands as the ejecta column density drops.
The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT), operating since 2008 in a scanning mode that revisits every sky position every three hours, provides the only all-sky MeV-to-GeV continuous monitor. LSU-led analysis stacked 23 SLSNe detected over 17 years of LAT data, weighting events by predicted magnetar gamma-ray flux under the Kasen-Bildsten parameterization. The dominant signal localized to SN 2017egm (SLSN-I, NGC 3191, z = 0.030 +/- 0.002), which had the longest optical plateau and the best-constrained magnetar parameters from previous optical modeling.
The excess in the stacked LAT light curve reaches 4.7 sigma post-trials, where the trials factor accounts for the 23 independent event positions and four temporal integration windows tested. The spectral index of the excess emission (photon index ~2.1) is consistent with magnetar spindown synchrotron emission and inconsistent with the softer thermal spectra expected from circumstellar interaction models, providing the first spectral discrimination between competing SLSN powering mechanisms.
The result is expected to sharpen considerably with the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA), whose northern array on La Palma is now in commissioning. CTA's sub-TeV threshold and factor-of-ten improvement in point-source sensitivity over existing imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes will probe the high-energy tail of magnetar spindown emission and constrain the initial spin period and magnetic field strength to a precision unreachable by optical photometry alone, completing the observational verification of the Kasen-Bildsten framework two decades after its publication.
- volumetric rate
- the number of events occurring per unit volume of space per unit time, used to quantify how common a phenomenon is in the universe
- magnetic dipole spindown
- the process by which a rotating magnetized neutron star loses rotational energy through electromagnetic radiation, slowing its spin over time