SN 1987A appears to be a core-collapse supernova, which should result in a
neutron star given the size of the original star. First, that the neutron star may be obscured by surrounding dense dust clouds. Second, that a
pulsar was formed, but with either an unusually large or small magnetic field. Third, that large amounts of material fell back on the neutron star, collapsing it further into a
black hole. Neutron stars and
black holes often give off light as material falls onto them. If there is a compact object in the supernova remnant, but no material to fall onto it, it would be too dim for detection. A fourth hypothesis is that the collapsed core became a
quark star. In 2019, evidence was presented for a neutron star inside one of the brightest dust clumps, close to the expected position of the supernova remnant. In 2021, further evidence was presented of hard X-ray emissions from SN 1987A originating in the pulsar wind nebula. The latter result is supported by a three-dimensional
magnetohydrodynamic model, which describes the evolution of SN 1987A from the SN event to the present, and reconstructs the ambient environment, predicting the absorbing power of the dense stellar material around the pulsar. In 2024, researchers using the
James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) identified distinctive emission lines of ionized
argon within the central region of the Supernova 1987A remnants. These emission lines, discernible only near the remnant's core, were analyzed using
photoionization models. The models indicate that the observed line ratios and velocities can be attributed to ionizing radiation originating from a neutron star illuminating gas from the inner regions of the exploded star. ==Light curve==