A massive star about 150 times the size of the Sun exploded in what could be a long-sought new type of supernova, Nasa scientists have said. Supernovae occur when huge, mature stars effectively run out of fuel and collapse in on themselves. But scientists believe this one was obliterated in an explosion which blasted all its material into space. And astronomers say a star in our own Milky Way galaxy could be about to perform the same celestial fireworks. The supernovastar, called SN 2006gy, was originally discovered in September last year.
The explosion was seen to peak for about 70 days, during which it is thought to have shone about five times more brightly than any supernova seen in the past. "Of all exploding stars ever observed, this was the king," Alex Filippenko, one of the Nasa-backed astronomers observing the phenomenon, said. Nathan Smith, who led a joint team from the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Texas in Austin, said it was a "truly monstrous explosion, a hundred times more energetic than atypical supernova". "That means the star that exploded might have been as massive as a star can get, about 150 times that of our Sun. We've never seen that before." He said the explosion, which was located some 240 million light-years away, polluted the surrounding environment with metals and elements that are needed for life.
View: Full Article | Source: BBC News
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Posted on Wednesday, May 09 - 2007
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Paranormal Category List (A-Z)All our articles are sorted under categories and topics, making it easier to cross reference different subjects. Below are all the different categories the articles are sorted under alphabetically. |
Space telescope spies dark matter
Engineers unveil China moon rover
Signs of water found on extrasolar planet
The "wow" mystery turns 30
NASA makes Exoplanet weathermap
Avatars "Pandora" could be a reality
Exploring the wisps in the night sky
Brussels sprouts ice-cream, anyone?
Christmas trees show up with live ornaments
Software ensures earth-to-Moon supply chain