homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Supernova observed right after its explosion

An unprecedented observation of a supernova right after its explosion has offered scientists extremely valuable insight on these cosmic explosions of biblical proportions. PTF 11kly, a type Ia supernova, was spotted in August in the Pinwheel galaxy and is one of the closest to Earth ever found – but don’t worry just yet – at […]

Mihai Andrei
December 15, 2011 @ 10:23 am

share Share

An unprecedented observation of a supernova right after its explosion has offered scientists extremely valuable insight on these cosmic explosions of biblical proportions.

PTF 11kly, a type Ia supernova, was spotted in August in the Pinwheel galaxy and is one of the closest to Earth ever found – but don’t worry just yet – at some 21 million light years away. It is so big it was actually observable with only binoculars in September, and it gave scientists the best chance yet to study this type of phenomena; astrophysicists reached some pretty interesting conclusions.

For the past half century, they’ve been analyzing type Ia supernovae, understanding that they originate from a binary star system – two stars orbiting each other. PTF 11kly originated from a white dwarf, which means that its companion couldn’t possibly have been a red giant, as previously believed. White dwarfs are usually dead forever, but in some cases, when they are part of a binary system, they can literally suck up matter from its companion (kind of nasty on their side); but sometimes, they can get too greedy and can’t stop absorbing matter, so they suck up to much and go supernova, fusing so fast that the burn can’t be stopped. Astrophysicists aren’t yet sure what kind of star the companion was.

“This is the first time through direct imaging of the explosion site, we were able to rule out certain types of stars as the companion to a Type Ia supernova,” says Weidong Li, a research scientist at the University of California, Berkeley. “The second star couldn’t have been a massive red giant.”

Analysis showed numerous elements just spewing out of the expanding fireball, including ionized oxygen, magnesium, silicon, calcium, and iron, traveling at 16,000 kilometers a second; however, oxygen traveled much faster than the rest of the elements, at 20,000 kilometers a second.

“The high-velocity oxygen shows that the oxygen wasn’t evenly distributed when the white dwarf blew up, indicating unusual clumpiness in the way it was dispersed,” says Peter Nugent of Berkeley Lab.

The explosion revealed an impressive amount of expulsion, including some rare radioactive nickel mixed up all the way through the photosphere.

“Understanding how these giant explosions create and mix materials is important because supernovae are where we get most of the elements that make up the Earth and even our own bodies – for instance, these supernovae are a major source of iron in the universe,” says Mark Sullivan of the University of Oxford. “So we are all made of bits of exploding stars.”

Via Wikipedia

share Share

Uranus Is Hotter than We Thought and Probably Deserves a Visit

Uranus is heating up from the inside.

Our Radar Systems Have Accidentally Turned Earth into a Giant Space Beacon for the Last 75 Years and Scientists Say Aliens Could Be Listening

If aliens have a radio telescope, they already know we exist.

Earth Is Spinning Faster Than Usual. Scientists Aren’t Sure Why

Shorter days ahead as Earth's rotation speeds up unexpectedly.

These bizarre stars could be burning darkness to survive

Our quest for dark matter is sending us on some wild adventures.

Interstellar comet: Everything We Know About 3I/ATLAS

The visitor is simply passing through our solar system.

This Colorful Galaxy Map Is So Detailed You Can See Stars Being Born

Astronomers unveil the most detailed portrait yet of a nearby spiral galaxy’s complex inner life

These Galaxies are Colliding at Two Million Miles Per Hour in Deep Space

A galactic pileup 94 million light-years away is giving astronomers a detailed look at how cosmic collisions shape the universe.

Your gold could come from some of the most violent stars in the universe

That gold in your phone could have originated from a magnetar.

Weirdest Planetary System Ever? Meet the Planet That Spins Perpendicular to Its Stars

Forget neat planetary orbits — this newly discovered exoplanet circles two brown dwarfs at a right angle.

Scientists Take "Baby Picture" of the Infant Universe and Then Weigh It. Here's What Its First 380,000 Years Tell Us

If today's Universe were an adult human, at 380,000 years old it would be only a few hours old.