Tag Archives: explosion

Surprising Phenomena Observed by NASA’s NuSTAR in Brightest Cosmic Explosion Ever Detected – SciTechDaily

  1. Surprising Phenomena Observed by NASA’s NuSTAR in Brightest Cosmic Explosion Ever Detected SciTechDaily
  2. Largest explosion since the Big Bang was powered by a bizarre energy jet unlike any other Livescience.com
  3. Brightest cosmic explosion on record is even weirder than first thought Business Insider
  4. Recording the entire process of a tera-electron volt gamma-ray burst during the death of a massive star Phys.org
  5. Brightest Cosmic Burst Since The Big Bang Observed And There’s Something Strange Going On Giant Freakin Robot
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Series of Indicators All Setting Up for Altcoin Explosion and New Bitcoin All-Time High, Says Popular Analyst – The Daily Hodl

  1. Series of Indicators All Setting Up for Altcoin Explosion and New Bitcoin All-Time High, Says Popular Analyst The Daily Hodl
  2. Bank Of America Reveals Surprise Crypto ‘Key Driver’ Amid $300 Billion Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB, XRP, Cardano, Dogecoin, Polygon And Solana Price Boom Forbes
  3. Analyst Who Called Bitcoin Bottom Last Year Says All-Time Highs for BTC in 2023 Realistic – Here’s Why The Daily Hodl
  4. Is Bitcoin’s (BTC) Rally to $30,000 the Start of a New Crypto Boom? Bloomberg
  5. Pundit Predicts Bitcoin’s Next Price Move as Accumulation Continues ZyCrypto
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Shocking meteor EXPLOSION forced NASA to trigger its asteroid defense-the Chelyabinsk event – HT Tech

  1. Shocking meteor EXPLOSION forced NASA to trigger its asteroid defense-the Chelyabinsk event HT Tech
  2. Experts on the Future of Planetary Defense 10 Years After the Chelyabinsk Asteroid Impact’s 440 Kiloton Explosion SciTechDaily
  3. The 10-year anniversary of the Chelyabinsk meteor: How it impacted RMNB and Evgeny Kuznetsov’s experience Russian Machine Never Breaks
  4. This asteroid actually crashed against Earth and changed space science forever HT Tech
  5. 2013 Chelyabinsk crash: When an asteroid hit Earth and exploded with energy of 35 nuclear bombs India Today
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‘Hiding in plain sight;’ Neighbors take stock of damage from San Francisco drug lab explosion – CBS San Francisco

  1. ‘Hiding in plain sight;’ Neighbors take stock of damage from San Francisco drug lab explosion CBS San Francisco
  2. Arrest made in connection to SF home explosion; police report details new clues found in debris ABC7 News Bay Area
  3. Suspect arrested in San Francisco Sunset home explosion; facing manslaughter, drug manufacturing cha KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  4. S.F. explosion: Man arrested on drug manufacturing, manslaughter charges San Francisco Chronicle
  5. Suspect Arrested In Sunset Home Explosion Was Allegedly Making PCP and/or Hash Oil In the House SFist
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UPDATE: Suspect arrested in deadly explosion at San Francisco home; Evidence shows drug lab – CBS San Francisco

  1. UPDATE: Suspect arrested in deadly explosion at San Francisco home; Evidence shows drug lab CBS San Francisco
  2. Suspect arrested in San Francisco Sunset home explosion; facing manslaughter, drug manufacturing cha KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  3. Arrest made in connection to SF home explosion; police report details new clues found in debris ABC7 News Bay Area
  4. SF house fire: Mysterious liquid-filled tanks recovered from wreckage San Francisco Chronicle
  5. ‘Hiding in plain sight;’ Neighbors take stock of damage from San Francisco drug lab explosion CBS San Francisco

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S.F. explosion: Man arrested on drug manufacturing, manslaughter charges – San Francisco Chronicle

  1. S.F. explosion: Man arrested on drug manufacturing, manslaughter charges San Francisco Chronicle
  2. Suspect arrested in San Francisco Sunset home explosion; facing manslaughter, drug manufacturing cha KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  3. SF house fire: Mysterious liquid-filled tanks recovered from wreckage San Francisco Chronicle
  4. San Francisco fire: 5 homes still evacuated after deadly SF house explosion and fire, investigation into cause underway KGO-TV
  5. Fire investigators search for clues behind San Francisco home explosion KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
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Arrest made in connection to San Francisco Outer Sunset home explosion; police report details backstory, narcotics found in debris – KGO-TV

  1. Arrest made in connection to San Francisco Outer Sunset home explosion; police report details backstory, narcotics found in debris KGO-TV
  2. Suspect arrested in San Francisco Sunset home explosion; facing manslaughter, drug manufacturing cha KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  3. SF deadly house fire investigation continues KRON 4
  4. SF house fire: Mysterious liquid-filled tanks recovered from wreckage San Francisco Chronicle
  5. Suspect arrested in San Francisco Sunset home explosion; facing manslaughter, drug manufacturing charges KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
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One arrested in connection with fatal Sunset District home explosion – KRON4

  1. One arrested in connection with fatal Sunset District home explosion KRON4
  2. Fire investigators search for clues behind San Francisco home explosion KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  3. San Francisco fire: 5 homes still evacuated after deadly SF house explosion and fire, investigation into cause underway KGO-TV
  4. SF house fire: Mysterious liquid-filled tanks recovered from wreckage San Francisco Chronicle
  5. Suspect arrested in San Francisco Sunset home explosion; facing manslaughter, drug manufacturing charges KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Astronomers find rare star system that will lead to gold-producing explosion

Astronomers at the National Science Foundation’s NOIRLab made the first confirmed detection of a star system that will one day form a kilonova, an ultra-powerful and gold-producing explosion created by merging neutron stars. 

Researchers said on Tuesday that they used data from the SMARTS 1.5-meter Telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile to uncover the first example of the phenomenally rare type of binary star system. The findings are published in the journal Nature. 

The arrangement, known as CPD-29 2176, is so astonishingly rare that only about 10 such systems are believed to exist in the Milky Way galaxy. 

CPD-29 2176, is located about 11,400 light-years from Earth and was first identified by NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory. 

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The SMARTS 1.5m telescope in Chile
(Rodrigo Hinojosa  )

Upon further observation with the telescope, the scientists were able to deduce the orbital characteristics and types of stars that make up this system: a neutron star that was created by an ultra-stripped supernova and a closely orbiting massive star that is in the process of becoming an ultra-stripped supernova itself.

An ultra-stripped supernova is the end-of-life explosion of a massive star that has had much of its outer atmosphere stripped away by a companion star. 

An artist’s impression of the first confirmed detection of a star system that will one day form a kilonova – the ultra-powerful, gold-producing explosion created by merging neutron stars.
(NOIRLab)

MORE THAN 3 BILLION STAR, GALAXIES ARE CAPTURED IN A MASSIVE NEW SURVEY

“The current neutron star would have to form without ejecting its companion from the system. An ultra-stripped supernova is the best explanation for why these companion stars are in such a tight orbit,” the paper’s lead author, Noel Richardson of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, said in a statement. “To one day create a kilonova, the other star would also need to explode as an ultra-stripped supernova so the two neutron stars could eventually collide and merge.”

This long-exposure photograph shows the motion of stars during the night above the Blanco 4-meter telescope (left) and the SMARTS 1.5-meter telescope (right) at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile, a program of the NSF’s National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory.
(Credit: CTIO//NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/D. Munizaga)

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It will take at least a million years for the massive star to end its life as a titanic supernova explosion and leave behind a second neutron star. The authors said the stellar remnant and the pre-existing neutron star will need to draw together before merging and noted that the resulting kilonova explosion will produce much more powerful gravitational waves and leave behind a large amount of heavy elements, including silver and gold.

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Astronomers identify 1st twin stars doomed to collide in kilonova explosion

Although massive stars usually die with spectacular explosions, a handful fizzle out like dud firecrackers.

Astronomers have identified the remnants of one such dud firecracker in SGR 0755-2933, a neutron star about 11,400 light-years from Earth in the southern constellation of Puppis. In new research, scientists say that earlier in its lifetime, this star transferred abnormally high amounts of mass to its binary companion — so much so that it was not left with enough material for an explosive death. Instead, it ended in a quiet “ultra-stripped” supernova, a rare cosmic event that leaves a super-dense remnant called a neutron star in its wake.

“This remarkable binary system is essentially a one-in-10-billion system,” André-Nicolas Chené, an astronomer at the National Science Foundation’s NOIRLab research center and a co-author of the new study, said in a statement.

Related: Right place, right time: Hubble telescope captured a supernova as it exploded

An artist’s depiction of a binary star system that will eventually end in two colliding neutron stars. (Image credit: CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/J. da Silva/Spaceengine/M. Zamani)

The neutron star and its closely orbiting binary companion — a star that the researchers also predict will someday collapse to become a neutron star — mark the first clear example of a star system that will ultimately trigger a kilonova, a cosmic explosion during which two neutron stars merge. 

Although a kilonova was first detected in 2017, astronomers then recorded only the aftermath of the event, thanks to observations of light and gravitational waves. The new research is the first time scientists have identified a binary star system that they know will end in a kilonova explosion.

Moreover, astronomers previously thought that only one or two such systems would exist in spiral galaxies like our Milky Way. Researchers of the latest study have now increased that estimate to 10, noting that these observations help them better understand the history, evolution and atypically calm deaths of stars in such systems.

“For quite some time, astronomers speculated about the exact conditions that could eventually lead to a kilonova,” Chené said in the statement. “These new results demonstrate that, in at least some cases, two sibling neutron stars can merge when one of them was created without a classical supernova explosion.”

The sibling star is massive, orbits the primary neutron star every 60 days, and has a name like a license plate: CPD-29 2176. Scientists behind the latest research studied this sibling star to understand the formation of the current star system, as well as what might unfold in its future.

“This is not just a simple binary system”

Clarissa Pavao, an undergraduate student at the Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Arizona, found the system while scouring data captured by the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile. In particular, she was plotting the spectra of the sibling star, an analysis of how much light a star emits at particular wavelengths. After cleaning noise from the data, she noticed one simple line in the spectra that suggested the massive star had a highly circular orbit — an unusual feature in binary star systems.

This was a key finding that helped the team conclude that the primary neutron star ended as a dud supernova, the astronomers said.

Usually, when one of the stars in a binary system burns through its hydrogen and nears the end of its main-sequence stage, it begins transferring mass to its companion star. The resulting end-of-life explosion often kicks companion stars out of the systems and into highly elliptical orbits.

An artist’s depiction of the life of the star system CPD-29 2176. The system began as two large stars (1); a few million years ago one star became a neutron star after a weak supernova (4); in a few million years, the second star will also become a neutron star (6); eventually, the pair will collide and cause a kilonova (9). (Image credit: CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/P. Marenfeld )

But this did not seem to have occurred in the intriguing system. To better understand what might have happened at the end of SGR 0755-2933’s life, astronomers waded through thousands of models that described binary star systems resembling the one they were studying. They only found two that matched.

The team then traced the star’s history and concluded it behaved, for the most part, like any other massive star running out of fuel: Toward the end of its life, the star began transferring mass to its companion and dwindled into a low-mass star with a helium core, as scientists expected. In this process, however, the star lost so much mass that its end-of-life supernova “didn’t even have enough energy to kick the orbit into the more typical elliptical shape seen in similar binaries,” Noel Richardson, an astronomer at Embry-Riddle and lead author of the new study, said in a statement.

The dying star also did not have enough energy to kick its companion out of the system, which is why the two stars continue to have tight orbits, according to the study.

In addition to learning more about kilonova events, the new research will help astronomers better understand the origins of some of the heaviest elements in our universe.

The quiet supernova occurred only a few million years ago, and astronomers expect the CPD-29 2176 system to remain as it is for at least one million years more. Their models show that, much like the primary neutron star, the sibling star too will then become an ultra-stripped supernova and eventually collapse into a neutron star.

Millions of years from now, the team predicts that the two neutron stars will spiral slowly toward each other in a cosmic dance, ultimately colliding in a kilonova explosion. Such explosions are known to be a source of immense quantities of heavy elements like platinum, xenon, uranium and gold “that get hurled into the universe,” Richardson said.

Astronomers have long suspected that heavy metals released during such events hovered in the interstellar medium until they coalesced into asteroids, which then bombarded Earth as it formed and deposited the precious metals we see today. The 2017 kilonova event alone sent at least 100 Earth’s worth of precious heavy metals out there, so it looks like a failed supernova isn’t such a loss to the universe after all.

The research is described in a paper (opens in new tab) published Wednesday (Feb. 1) in the journal Nature.

Follow Sharmila Kuthunur on Twitter @Sharmilakg. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.



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