Back in 2005 there was no indication among mainstream researchers that
a supernova event was anything other than the demise of a star whereas
presently that perception has altered,albeit slowly,towards a more
productive line of investigation where,in certain circumstances, the
progenitor star is not destroyed but lives on.A more adventurous
proposal that certain supernova events are not the death of a star but
the birth of a solar system.
https://groups.google.com/group/sci.astro.research/msg/53bfef0b1b31d7da?hl=en
The moderator's suggestion at the end of that response in
2005,regardless of original intention,contains merit in that recent
data indicates that solar system evolutionary processes must take into
account that the system is moving around the galactic axis and there
is a partitioning between local solar system evolutionary processes
and the larger scale galactic influences bearing on the system.The
offset Sun and the debris ring in the Fomalhaut system adequately
highlights this partitioning which makes it possible to investigate
whether the progenitor star is responsible for the nebula through
which a solar system is formed -
http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/assets/2005/06/22/200562231.jpg