• [en] When Will the Next Supernova in Our Galaxy Occur?

    From Internetado@21:1/5 to All on Wed Aug 31 15:28:42 2022
    XPost: europa.sci.spatio

    *Scientists have new tools at their disposal to detect and study the
    dramatic explosion of a star*

    Imagine that you’re an astronomer in the early years of the 17th
    century. The telescope hasn’t yet been invented, so you scan the night
    sky only with the unaided eye. Then one day you see a remarkable sight:
    A bright new star appears, and for the next few weeks it outshines even
    the planet Venus. It’s so bright it can even be seen in broad daylight.
    It lingers in the sky for many months, gradually dimming over time.

    That’s what the German astronomer Johannes Kepler saw in 1604;
    skywatchers elsewhere in Europe, the Middle East and Asia saw it too.
    We now know it wasn’t really a new star but rather a supernova
    explosion—an enormous blast that happens when certain stars reach the
    ends of their lives.

    The 1604 event was the last time that a supernova appeared within our
    Milky Way galaxy. Or at least, the last one known to have been
    observed; it’s possible that there have been other nearby supernovas in
    the interim, likely obscured by intervening gas and dust. Astronomers
    can also view the remains of long-ago supernovas, such as the crab
    nebula, whose light first reached Earth in 1054. The next best thing to Kepler’s supernova in recent years was the supernova sighted in the
    Large Magellanic Cloud, a small companion galaxy of the Milky Way, in
    1987 (and designated 1987A). Astronomers have also recorded many
    supernovas in other galaxies; these are visible telescopically but
    would have been entirely missed by skywatchers back in Kepler’s day.

    In other words, it’s been a long wait—418 years since we’ve seen a star explode in our galaxy. So are we overdue for a bright, nearby
    supernova?
    (continue)...

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/when-will-the-next-supernova-in-our-galaxy-occur-180980422/
    --
    [s]
    Internetado.
    --- No matter how fast your PC is, Microsoft will find a way to slow it
    down

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  • From Martin Brown@21:1/5 to Internetado on Thu Sep 1 13:34:15 2022
    On 31/08/2022 19:28, Internetado wrote:
    *Scientists have new tools at their disposal to detect and study the
    dramatic explosion of a star*

    Imagine that you’re an astronomer in the early years of the 17th
    century. The telescope hasn’t yet been invented, so you scan the night
    sky only with the unaided eye. Then one day you see a remarkable sight:
    A bright new star appears, and for the next few weeks it outshines even
    the planet Venus. It’s so bright it can even be seen in broad daylight.
    It lingers in the sky for many months, gradually dimming over time.

    That’s what the German astronomer Johannes Kepler saw in 1604;
    skywatchers elsewhere in Europe, the Middle East and Asia saw it too. We
    now know it wasn’t really a new star but rather a supernova explosion—an enormous blast that happens when certain stars reach the ends of their
    lives.

    The 1604 event was the last time that a supernova appeared within our
    Milky Way galaxy. Or at least, the last one known to have been observed; it’s possible that there have been other nearby supernovas in the
    interim, likely obscured by intervening gas and dust. Astronomers can
    also view the remains of long-ago supernovas, such as the crab nebula,
    whose light first reached Earth in 1054. The next best thing to Kepler’s supernova in recent years was the supernova sighted in the Large
    Magellanic Cloud, a small companion galaxy of the Milky Way, in 1987
    (and designated 1987A). Astronomers have also recorded many supernovas
    in other galaxies; these are visible telescopically but would have been entirely missed by skywatchers back in Kepler’s day.

    In other words, it’s been a long wait—418 years since we’ve seen a star explode in our galaxy. So are we overdue for a bright, nearby supernova? (continue)...

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/when-will-the-next-supernova-in-our-galaxy-occur-180980422/

    We haven't had a super nova in our galaxy for quite a while and we don't
    want one too close to us either. The best we had was Nova Cygni 1992:

    https://quantummechanics.ucsd.edu/ph87/ScientificAmerican/sciam_magnificant-cosmos/nova-of-century.pdf

    https://esahubble.org/images/opo9406a/

    --
    Regards,
    Martin Brown

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