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- Supernova - Wikipedia
A supernova (pl : supernovae) is a powerful and luminous explosion of a star A supernova occurs during the last evolutionary stages of a massive star, or when a white dwarf is triggered into runaway nuclear fusion
- What Is a Supernova? | NASA Space Place – NASA Science for Kids
A supernova of a star more than about 10 times the size of our sun may leave behind the densest objects in the universe— black holes The Crab Nebula is the leftover, or remnant, of a massive star in our Milky Way that died 6,500 light-years away
- Latest Supernovae - Purdue University
Here you will find a list of the supernovae we can see right now, as well as information about where they are in the sky, images of that object and how bright the explosion was at the last time we measured it The data on this page comes from TNS and ATEL circulars
- Supernova | Definition, Types, Facts | Britannica
supernova, any of a class of violently exploding stars whose luminosity after eruption suddenly increases many millions of times its normal level The term supernova is derived from nova (Latin: “new”), the name for another type of exploding star
- Scientists just found a supercharged supernova — powered up by a . . .
NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray spacecraft has observed a super-bright, supercharged supernova explosion powered up by the creation of a highly magnetic dead star, or magnetar
- 15 Facts About Supernovas: The Universe’s Biggest Explosions
During a supernova, temperatures and pressures become so extreme that nuclear reactions produce elements heavier than iron This process, known as rapid neutron capture or the r-process, builds atomic nuclei in fractions of a second
- What is a supernova? - EarthSky
A supernova is a star's colossal explosion at the end of its life, which can outshine its entire galaxy Read about causes and types of supernovae here
- Supernova - ESA Hubble
Supernova explosions are spectacular exceptions to that rule Several different pathways can lead to a supernova explosion, one of which is the death of a supermassive star
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