Astronomers spy double supernova

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Jun 26, 2007, 7:32:19 PM6/26/07
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*Signs In The Sun, The Moon and The Stars

Astronomers spy double supernova*

By SPACE.com staff

Scientists have spotted two stellar explosions going off just weeks
apart in the same galaxy.

The discovery, made by NASA's Swift satellite, marks the first time two
supernova events have been observed in a single galaxy so close in time.

The blasts occurred in an obscure galaxy located 380 million light-years
away in the constellation Hercules. Called MCG +05-43-16, the galaxy had
never been known to host a supernova before.

Supernovas are extremely energetic explosions that mark the deaths of
massive stars. The two newly spotted blasts were triggered in different
ways. Supernova 2007ck, first spotted on May 19, was a so-called Type II
event, which occurs when the core of a massive star runs out of nuclear
fuel and collapses under its own gravitational weight. This produces a
shock wave that tears the star apart.

In contrast, Supernova 2007co was a Type 1a event, which occurs when a
white dwarf star siphons off so much material from the surface of a
companion star that it blows up like a giant thermonuclear bomb. This
second blast was observed on June 4.

"Most galaxies have a supernova every 25 to 100 years, so it's
remarkable to have a galaxy with two supernovas discovered just 16 days
apart," said Stefan Immler of NASA's Goddard Space Center. In 2006,
Immler used NASA's Swift satellite to image two supernovas in the
elliptical galaxy NGC 1316. Both of those explosions were Type 1a
events, and occurred about six months apart.

Scientists say the near simultaneous explosions in MCG +05-43-16 is just
a coincidence created by our unique vantage point. Within the faraway
galaxy, the two supernovas are tens of thousands of light-years apart,
and because light travels at a finite speed, alien astronomers in the
galaxy itself, or in a different galaxy, might record the two explosions
as happening thousands of years apart.
Copyright 2007, SPACE.com Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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