This Space Rock’s Weird Chemistry Suggests It Came From a Supernova0
- From Around the Web, Space
- June 2, 2022
A rare stellar death may have formed a rock that eventually landed in Egypt.
A rare stellar death may have formed a rock that eventually landed in Egypt.
Ever since scientists made the first detection of gravitational waves from a pair of colliding black holes in 2015, evidence has been growing that the Universe ought to be full of them.
The catch: We have to wait until about 2037 for an answer
When a dead star plunges into an active star, expect an explosion of astronomical proportions that isn’t supposed to happen yet.Astronomers were able to work out this stellar puzzle after tracing an unusual burst of bright radio waves in 2017.
Astronomers using data from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope have looked for dust-extinguished supernovae in the nuclear regions of 40 luminous and ultra-luminous infrared galaxies within 200 Mpc (652 million light-years).
Analysis of a rare, ancient star suggests a new birthplace for elements like uranium and silver
Astronomers have discovered a new type of supernova, or star explosion, and it provides a new window into the violent life cycle of stars. The new research, focused on supernova 2018zd, confirms a prediction made by University of Tokyo astronomer Ken’ichi Nomoto more than 40 years ago.
A smattering of plutonium atoms embedded in Earth’s crust are helping to resolve the origins of nature’s heaviest elements.
The discovery hints at unusual scenarios for how stars can evolve before they explode
The bright star’s great dimming may have been a big dust burp