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Results tagged “stars” from 60 Second Science

Bang, whimper, or … gamma ray burst from the Death Star?

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The astronomy quote of the week comes from Aussie astronomer Peter Tuthill:
"I used to appreciate this spiral just for its beautiful form, but now I can't help a twinge of feeling that it is uncannily like looking down a rifle barrel."

The end could be closer than we thought.

In the March 1st Astrophysical Journal, Tuthill reports on a photogenic binary star system he’s been watching for some time. The dancing duo is a Wolf-Rayet system, which means that one of the stars is dangerously unstable. As in, close to going supernova. The press release calls it a “ticking time bomb.”

For 8 years, Tuthill has believed himself lucky for getting such a nice angle to watch the spiraling star from. Here’s how he describes an image of it (posted on the next page of this post) on his web site:

A sequence of 11 sharp frames show the elegant spiral nebula in the constellation of Sagittarius to be rotating in a circle every 8 months, keeping precise time like a jewel in a cosmic clock. In the image to the left [follow the jump to the next page to see it], we have rotated the camera frame of each of the 11 images so as to follow the motion, and as a result we can stack all our images into a single false-colour composite.

But Tuthill’s stellar view of the star could be bad news for Spaceship Earth.

Continue reading 'Bang, whimper, or … gamma ray burst from the Death Star?' >

Interstellar fugitive?

9b4c3_hyperstar.jpgIn the last few years, astronomers have identified 10 “hypervelocity” stars, which race away from the Milky Way at 10 times the speed of normal stars. Nine of these burning bullets are believed to have originated in our own galaxy. What about #10?

Yesterday, astronomers from the Carnegie Institution and Queen’s University Belfast announced that the stellar stranger isn’t from around here. The star is believed to be only about 35 million years old, but it’s about 100 million years away from the center of our galaxy. (They’re calling this the “paradox of youth.”) They estimate that the star is moving at about 1.6 million miles per hour.

How to explain the conflict between its time and position? The stargazers came up with two theories and finally settled on this one: they believe the young star “recently” escaped from the Large Magellanic Cloud (one of our nearest neighboring galaxies).
“Escaped” is probably the wrong word here—“violently expelled” is more like it.

Continue reading 'Interstellar fugitive?' >

Superdupernova explodes more than once [podcast]

Today's 60 Second Science podcast is brought to you by Explosions in the Sky:

Superdupernova explodes more than once

Full transcript after the jump...

Continue reading 'Superdupernova explodes more than once [podcast]' >

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