Astronomy

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spacecraft show that the total
mass loss rate from Io is about
2,200 pounds (1,000 kilograms)
per second. At this rate, the
total mass lost by Io over the
lifetime of the solar system is
about 7x10^20 pounds (3x10^20 kg).
This is 0.33 percent of Io’s total
mass. So only a tiny percentage
of Io’s mass will disappear over
the lifetime of the solar system,
leaving the moon intact as the
Sun and the solar system age.
Julie Rathbun
Senior Scientist, Planetary Science
Institute, Claremont, California


Q: DOES (OR WILL) THE
PLANET VENUS GET HOTTER
AS YEARS AND CENTURIES
PASS, OR WILL IT STAY AT
THE SAME TEMPERATURE?
Robert Miniszewski
Buffalo, New York


A: The surface of Venus is hot
because its massive atmo-
sphere causes a huge green-
house effect. This effect could
date back billions of years to
early atmospheric formation,
or it could be related to
immense outgassing during a
geological cataclysm several
hundred million years ago.
The United States has not sent
a spacecraft to Venus since
1989, and we need new data to
determine this.
Either way, Venus is unlikely
to get hotter by itself. This is
because it is approximately in
radiation equilibrium; in real-
ity, heat out is a little bigger
than heat in, due to heat loss
from the interior. But all the
planets will heat up as the Sun’s
brightness increases over the
next several billion years as a
natural part of its evolution,
eventually scorching the sur-
faces of all the inner planets,
including Venus and Earth.
Robert E. Grimm
Director of Department of Space
Studies, Southwest Research Institute,
Boulder, Colorado


Q: WHICH SUPERNOVA DID
TYCHO OBSERVE IN 1572?
Gene Scovell
Los Osos, California

A: The supernova reported by
Danish astronomer Tycho
Brahe (and many others, inde-
pendently) occurred in the con-
stellation Cassiopeia. Tycho
noticed the “new” star on
November 11, 1572, after which
it brightened to about the mag-
nitude of Venus (–4) and was
visible during the day for about
two weeks. The supernova then
slowly faded until it was no
longer visible with the naked
eye in the night sky by March


  1. Keep in mind that the
    telescope was not invented until
    1608, so follow-up observations
    at the time were impossible.
    The supernova’s remnant
    was identified in the mid-20th
    century via telescope. Today,


astronomers refer to it by several
names, including B Cassiopeiae
and SN 1572, but it also carries
the informal name of Tycho’s
supernova. The remnant is
about 13,000 light-years away
within the Milky Way. It is
spherical and consists of an
expanding cloud of debris, led
by an outer shell of high-
energy electrons associated
with the initial shock wave
from the blast. A second shock
wave, called a rebound shock
wave, travels inward and has lit
up the debris.
Using the remnant’s spec-
trum and light ref lected off
nearby dust, astronomers have
classified Tycho’s supernova as
a type Ia event: the explosion of
a white dwarf that tips over its
allowed mass limit after accret-
ing matter from a nearby com-
panion. But recent work
published in September in

Nature Astronomy offers an
alternative scenario, based on
new observations of the rem-
nant and its environment: The
progenitor may have been the
merger of two white dwarf
stars, rather than a single white
dwarf stealing mass from a
stellar companion.
Alison Klesman
Associate Editor

Send us your
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The Chandra X-ray Observatory has imaged Tycho’s supernova in detail. An outer expanding shell of high-energy
electrons associated with the initial shock wave is visible as blue. The debris left over from the explosion (red and
green) glows due to heating from a rebounding, inward-moving shock wave. NASA/CXC/SAO
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