Supernova Discovered 34
hey! writes: "A supernova was found last Wednesday in the M74 galaxy (announcment can be found here :http://www.aavso.org/newsflash/nf904.shtml. It is not visible to the naked eye, but was discovered with at 10 inch telescope and is getting brighter -- it may be visible in amateur instruments as small as 4", according to Lew Gramer of the IAAC list. More information is available at seds.org including a very nice before and after picture."
When did it happen? (Score:2)
IIRC, it takes about 7 minutes for the light from the sun to reach the Earth. This supernova is no doubt a long ways away (or else we would be fearing for our lives?), so it stands to reason it actually took place days, weeks, or even months ago.
It's like looking into the past.
Re:When did it happen? (Score:3, Informative)
Our nearest celestial neighbour is Alpha Centauri which is 4.5 light years away. This means if it went supernova, we wouldn't know about it for 4.5 years.
SO the shockwave should be getting here (Score:3, Funny)
Re:When did it happen? (Score:3, Informative)
Additional linkage from APOD [nasa.gov]
Re:When did it happen? (Score:1)
Not to nitpick, but this has bothered me and left me in a state of confusion: doesn't a statement like this suggest some absolute standard of time? Wouldn't this (giving an age of an event) suggest the possibility of knowing that two events were indeed simultaneous? It was my understanding that no two events can be verified to be simultaneous, for the time at which an event occurs is based on the observer's frame of reference.
Re:When did it happen? (Score:2)
Re:When did it happen? (Score:5, Informative)
No criticism intended, but if you are wondering if something visible in a distant galaxy occurred days, weeks or months ago, you need to get a fast update on just how BIG the universe is. I recommend a quick trip to the Powers of Ten [powersoften.com] website....
Re:When did it happen? (Score:2)
It's not just like it, it is looking into the past.
Um, Supernovas are much more unpleasant than that (Score:2)
Fortuneatly, stars tend to get all funky and red-giant-y before doing the thermonuclear BreakDance to end all Breakdances, so we'd probably have enough warning to build shelters. Or just cower and have an epidemic of mass insanity - either way is cool, I guess. If we don't know about it until the boom, though - well, have you ever seen "On The Beach"? The original, not the remake.
Spotted the Oasis (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Spotted the Oasis (Score:2, Funny)
So are you implying that the supernova is like the Bossa Nova [amazon.com]? The Dance of Love?
Re:Spotted the Oasis (Score:1)
nonplussed (Score:1)
wouldn't it be neat... (Score:2, Insightful)
being pragmatic... (Score:1)
really ? except thiose "interesting facts" about light travelling yada yada..
Re:being pragmatic... (Score:1)
Re:being pragmatic... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:being pragmatic... (Score:5, Interesting)
It depends on you.
Some years ago, I got out on a cold winter morning with my girlfriend (no my wife) to see Haley's comet. It wasn't nearly as spectactular as Hyatuke, which in turn was no great shakes unless you were accustomed to looking into the skies. Did it change my life?
Well, sort of.
It didn't get me a better job, so I could buy a larger TV and Tivo. But I did get to see something my ancestors had seen, century after century, and knowing as they did not know that it connects me with them. I did see the dirty ball of ice that caused apocalyptic hysteria every 75 years in the dark ages, that raised and lowered the curtain on Mark Twain's life. To understand this thing obeys the universal laws of gravitation, Kepler's law, that in a few decades it will return to the mysterious and unexplored outer regions of the solar system, reach its apogee, and slowly turn and begin to pick up speed to come rocketing through the inner solar system. To wonder if I will be there to see its return with my children, grandchildren and great grand children (there's a small, small chance I will be alive if I live to be 99 and keep my eyesight).
People spend a huge amount of their lives to pay for the acquisition of goods that they think make a difference in their lives. Perhaps your passion is fast cars, high fidelity audio equipment, cameras or video equipment. Nobody questions these passions. My passion to see things for myself. To see the gossamer web of the M44 beehive; the struggle of an adult insect emerging from its chrsalis; the great equatorial belts of Saturn under the shadow of the rings; the chocolate brown dusty layer containing the Iridium anamoly of the K-T boundary in the Montana badlands; the shimmering of bioluminescent plankton in the summer seas; flocks of birds swooping and surfing each others wake on invisble air currents.
Does it make a difference in my life? Yes.
Would it make a difference in your life?
It depends on you.
Re:being pragmatic... (Score:2)
The galaxy went dim? (Score:1)
SAJ
Re:The galaxy went dim? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The galaxy went dim? (Score:2, Informative)
Because there are so many different variables involved, it's common to see variations like this. The galaxies do not "go dim".
More on M74 here [seds.org].
Re:The galaxy went dim? (Score:2)
Re:The galaxy went dim? (Score:4, Informative)
In M74? (Score:2)
Re:In M74? (Score:2, Informative)
If it was in our galaxy, it would be MUCH brighter.
Might be hypernova (Score:5, Informative)
There is an excellent site that will track the progress of this supernova here [rochesterastronomy.org]
Space.com has an article about hypernova here [space.com]. More detail about hypernova mechanics are here [nasa.gov] and here [nasa.gov]
If they can catch a Gamma-Ray Burst with this object, then this will be a pretty big deal.
Re:Might be hypernova (Score:2, Informative)
Acording to this site:
For the year 2002, 43 supernovae have been reported (282 last year).
So one more isn't much to write home about (or slashdot).
Re:Might be hypernova (Score:2, Informative)
Of course, as has been pointed out, it's also significantly brighter then most supernovas.
Don't! (Score:5, Funny)
> I hope they point the hubble torwards it.
Don't do it! This it the latest goatse trick - probably a black hole or something.