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Spotlight on an exploding star.


The catastrophic collapse of a star is attracting a lot of attention right now.

Astronomers Famous astronomers and astrophysicists include:

Directory: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

A
  • Marc Aaronson (USA, 1950 – 1987)
  • George Ogden Abell (USA, 1927 – 1983)
 were drawn to the distant explosion by a gamma-ray burst--radiation of extremely high energy. They then detected the fiery glow of the exploding star, or supernova supernova, a massive star in the latter stages of stellar evolution that suddenly contracts and then explodes, increasing its energy output as much as a billionfold. , that generated the burst. The glow was so bright that it outshone the entire galaxy that hosts the star.

As a star collapses and explodes at the end of its life, it spits out jets of material that can move almost as fast as the speed of light. As chunks of material collide col·lide  
intr.v. col·lid·ed, col·lid·ing, col·lides
1. To come together with violent, direct impact.

2.
, they produce gamma rays Gamma rays

Electromagnetic radiation emitted from excited atomic nuclei as an integral part of the process whereby the nucleus rearranges itself into a state of lower excitation (that is, energy content).
.

Gamma-ray bursts can be seen over extremely long distances-billions of light-years. The visible light that comes from a supernova, however, can be observed only if the star is relatively close to Earth. The newly detected supernova is 440 million light-years from Earth, and it appears in the sky in the constellation Aries.

The gamma-ray burst, called GRB GRB Gamma Ray Burst(er)
GRB Graduate Recruitment Bureau
GRB Grid Resource Broker
GRB Grootschalig Referentiebestand (Dutch: large scale mapping program)
GRB Gharb
 060218, lasted almost 2,000 seconds, which is about 100 times as long as a typical burst. As soon as the satellite detected it, astronomers began racing to locate the supernova that went with it.

Researchers from the California Institute of Technology California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena, Calif.; originally for men, became coeducational in 1970; founded 1891 as Throop Polytechnic Institute; called Throop College of Technology, 1913–20.  in Pasadena found it on Feb. 21, using the large Gemini South Observatory on Cerro Pachon Mountain in Chile.

The supernova should be at its brightest on March 5. With a telescope at least 16 inches across, anyone in the Northern Hemisphere should be able to see it.

Every supernova becomes either a black hole or a magnetar, an extremely dense, rapidly spinning star with an enormous magnetic field. Black holes are so dense that they swallow anything that comes near them, including light.-E. Sohn

http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20060308/Note3.asp
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Author:Sohn, Emily
Publication:Science News for Kids
Article Type:Brief article
Date:Mar 8, 2006
Words:291
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