The Crab Nebula contains the remains of an exploded star located about 6,500 light years from Earth. The powerhouse "engine" energizing the Crab system is a pulsar (a rapidly spinning neutron star), which is sending out bursts of radiation 30 times a second. Experts used X-ray data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory to create a three-dimensional (3D) representation of the Crab for anyone to explore. The structures revealed by Chandra’s X-rays include the pulsar and a ringed disk of energized material, with jets of particles that fire off from opposite ends of the energetic pulsar.
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The 3D model serves as scientifically informed approximation for visualizing the nebula in X-ray light. The nested structures of the Crab show that the nebula is not a classic supernova remnant, but a pulsar wind nebula. A traditional supernova remnant consists of a blast wave, and debris from the supernova that has been heated to millions of degrees. In a pulsar wind nebula, the system's inner region consists of lower-temperature gas that is heated up to thousands of degrees by the high-energy synchrotron radiation.
Select the 3D printer of your choice to make your own Crab pulsar. Download the files below. For our 3D-printed example shown here, one color of PLA filament was used. Support structures were required and removed after printing.
Author/Origin/License:
- File: NASA/STScI/F.Summers, et al.; NASA/Caltech /IPAC/R.Hurt; NASA/CXC/SAO/N.Wolk, et al., Public Domain
- Print: NASA/CXC/SAO/A.Jubett et al., Public Domain
The author marked this model as their own original creation.