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Re: Supernova over JC -- If sky is clear and if you have a good pair of binoculars
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Supernova to be visible for 2 nights
David Perlman, SF Chronicle Science Editor Thursday, September 8, 2011 A dying star that exploded 21 million years ago in a cataclysmic burst of energy called a supernova has sent its light streaming across the cosmos, leaving a pinpoint of light in the sky that Bay Area residents with a good pair of binoculars should be able to see over the next two nights. The supernova, brighter than all the stars in the universe combined, blazed from a galaxy near the constellation Big Dipper, according to Peter Nugent, an astronomer and senior scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who detected its light last week. Despite its explosive brilliance, the light is dim at this distance. Its faint light will reach its peak tonight and Friday night, and should be visible in the clear night sky through a quality pair of binoculars or with amateur telescopes of 3 inches or larger, Nugent said. He picked up the supernova soon after the explosion became visible on Aug. 23 in an image sent from an automated telescope at the famed Palomar Observatory near San Diego. Astronomers haven't seen a supernova so close to Earth in 25 years, he said - nor one as bright in more than 40 years. While the explosion was immense, it involved a star of only modest dimensions - a white dwarf only 1.4 times the mass of our sun, Nugent said. Supernovas are common, but most are more than a billion light-years away and are too faint to be visible except through the most powerful telescopes. So the opportunity to observe one only 21 million light-years away has astronomers aiming their telescopes at the blast from observatories around the world. The Hubble Space Telescope has also been assigned to begin studying the physics and chemistry of the explosion, NASA officials said. This supernova is classed as Type 1a, and is catalogued under the name PTF11kly. The exploding star was one member of a stellar pair, known as a binary system, that had already burned away its hydrogen and helium in thermonuclear explosions, leaving only its carbon and oxygen to fuel the final outburst, Nugent said. Because the light intensity of supernovas is well known, astronomers use them as "standard candles" to calculate the distances of far-off galaxies, and thus measure the rate at which the entire universe is expanding under the mysterious influence of what is called dark energy, Nugent explained. Alex Filippenko, leader of a team of supernova observers at the UC Lick Observatory, said this newest one will prove valuable in helping astronomers to refine their distance calculations for those standard candles. It should also shed new light on the exploding star's companion, Filippenko said. For example, astronomers might be able to determine whether the binary pair were both originally white dwarf stars, and whether the star that exploded might have been "stealing matter from its companion" as it built up toward its final blast, or - perhaps - whether both stars merged to explode in a single blast. Every explosion of a supernova sends out bursts of all the elements that make up every bit of matter in the universe. "All the calcium in our bones, all the iron in our blood, all the chemicals in our bodies, came originally from supernovas that exploded even before the Earth was formed," Nugent said. How to see it Berkeley astronomer Peter Nugent explains how to see the supernova on You Tube: sfgate.com/ZLCS. Learning more Free talk on the supernova by Berkeley astronomer Peter Nugent. Where: Chabot Space and Science Center, 10000 Skyline Blvd., Oakland. When: Beginning at dusk Saturday as the center's telescopes focus on the Pinwheel Galaxy, where the cosmic explosion's light is visible. E-mail David Perlman at dperlman@sfchronicle.com. Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article ... K1L0P5I.DTL#ixzz1XNWcVlJE
Posted on: 2011/9/8 16:18
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Re: Supernova over JC -- If sky is clear and if you have a good pair of binoculars
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Home away from home
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Supernova to be visible for 2 nights
David Perlman, SF Chronicle Science Editor Thursday, September 8, 2011 FBI agents searching Solyndra in Fremont 09.08.11 Obama looks to create jobs, put GOP on the spot 09.08.11 Congressional debt reduction panel kicks off work 09.08.11 A dying star that exploded 21 million years ago in a cataclysmic burst of energy called a supernova has sent its light streaming across the cosmos, leaving a pinpoint of light in the sky that Bay Area residents with a good pair of binoculars should be able to see over the next two nights. The supernova, brighter than all the stars in the universe combined, blazed from a galaxy near the constellation Big Dipper, according to Peter Nugent, an astronomer and senior scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who detected its light last week. Despite its explosive brilliance, the light is dim at this distance. Its faint light will reach its peak tonight and Friday night, and should be visible in the clear night sky through a quality pair of binoculars or with amateur telescopes of 3 inches or larger, Nugent said. He picked up the supernova soon after the explosion became visible on Aug. 23 in an image sent from an automated telescope at the famed Palomar Observatory near San Diego. Astronomers haven't seen a supernova so close to Earth in 25 years, he said - nor one as bright in more than 40 years. While the explosion was immense, it involved a star of only modest dimensions - a white dwarf only 1.4 times the mass of our sun, Nugent said. Supernovas are common, but most are more than a billion light-years away and are too faint to be visible except through the most powerful telescopes. So the opportunity to observe one only 21 million light-years away has astronomers aiming their telescopes at the blast from observatories around the world. The Hubble Space Telescope has also been assigned to begin studying the physics and chemistry of the explosion, NASA officials said. This supernova is classed as Type 1a, and is catalogued under the name PTF11kly. The exploding star was one member of a stellar pair, known as a binary system, that had already burned away its hydrogen and helium in thermonuclear explosions, leaving only its carbon and oxygen to fuel the final outburst, Nugent said. Because the light intensity of supernovas is well known, astronomers use them as "standard candles" to calculate the distances of far-off galaxies, and thus measure the rate at which the entire universe is expanding under the mysterious influence of what is called dark energy, Nugent explained. Alex Filippenko, leader of a team of supernova observers at the UC Lick Observatory, said this newest one will prove valuable in helping astronomers to refine their distance calculations for those standard candles. It should also shed new light on the exploding star's companion, Filippenko said. For example, astronomers might be able to determine whether the binary pair were both originally white dwarf stars, and whether the star that exploded might have been "stealing matter from its companion" as it built up toward its final blast, or - perhaps - whether both stars merged to explode in a single blast. Every explosion of a supernova sends out bursts of all the elements that make up every bit of matter in the universe. "All the calcium in our bones, all the iron in our blood, all the chemicals in our bodies, came originally from supernovas that exploded even before the Earth was formed," Nugent said. How to see it Berkeley astronomer Peter Nugent explains how to see the supernova on You Tube: sfgate.com/ZLCS. Learning more Free talk on the supernova by Berkeley astronomer Peter Nugent. Where: Chabot Space and Science Center, 10000 Skyline Blvd., Oakland. When: Beginning at dusk Saturday as the center's telescopes focus on the Pinwheel Galaxy, where the cosmic explosion's light is visible. E-mail David Perlman at dperlman@sfchronicle.com. Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article ... K1L0P5I.DTL#ixzz1XNWcVlJE
Posted on: 2011/9/8 16:18
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Re: Supernova over JC -- If sky is clear and if you have a good pair of binoculars
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Home away from home
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Given that this was posted somewhere (no idea where - you didn't include source/link) early last Saturday, could "this weekend" have meant the one just passed?
Posted on: 2011/9/8 15:44
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