💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 1642.gmi captured on 2023-09-08 at 18:45:29. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)

➡️ Next capture (2024-05-10)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Huge Explosion Reveals the Most Massive Star Known

2009-12-03 08:48:52

Clara Moskowitz

Staff Writer

SPACE.com clara Moskowitz

staff Writer

space.com Wed Dec 2, 1:15 pm ET

All supernova explosions are violent affairs, but this one takes the cake.

Astronomers have spotted a new type of extremely bright cosmic explosion they

think originates from an exceptionally massive star.

This breed of explosion has been long predicted, but never before seen. Like

all supernovas, the blast is thought to have marked the end of a star's life.

But in this case, that star may have started out with 200 times the mass of the

sun.

The supernova in question, SN2007bi, was observed in 2007 in a nearby dwarf

galaxy. Scientists knew at once it was something different because it was about

50 to 100 times brighter than a typical supernova.

"It was much brighter, and it was bright for a very long time," said researcher

Paolo Mazzali of the Max-Planck Institute for Astrophysics in Germany. "We

could observe this thing almost two years after it was discovered, where you

normally don't see anything anymore."

After analyzing its signature, astronomers published a paper in the Dec. 3

issue of the journal Nature confirming that it matches theoretical predictions

of a so-called pair-instability supernova.

"There were some doubts that they existed," said astronomer Norbert Langer of

the University of Bonn in Germany, who did not work on the project. Langer

wrote an opinion essay on the finding in the same issue of Nature. "There were

severe doubts that stars that massive could ever form in the universe. Now we

seem to be very sure that there was a star with 200 solar masses."

In a pair-instability supernova, the star has neared the end of its life and

exhausted its main supplies of hydrogen and helium, leaving it a core of mostly

oxygen. In smaller stars, the core continues to burn until eventually it is all

iron, then collapses in a Type II supernova, leaving behind a remnant black

hole or neutron star.

But in the case of an extremely massive star, while its core is still made of

oxygen, it releases photons that are so energetic, they create pairs of

electrons and their anti-matter opposites, positrons. When the matter and

antimatter meet, they annihilate each other. This reaction reduces the star's

pressure, and it collapses, igniting the oxygen core in a runaway nuclear

explosion that eats up the whole star, leaving no remnant at all.

The discovery of this rare type of supernova suggests that a few stars actually

can grow into such large behemoths which has long been a topic of debate.

"I was never a believer in very massive stars," Mazzali told SPACE.com. "Seeing

something like this explode means these things exist. This is a fairly new

development in the formation of stars."