The Nearest Supernova Candidate To Earth: IK Pegasi 55
The Bad Astronomer writes "What's the nearest star to Earth that can explode as a supernova? Spica, at 260 light years away, is the nearest massive star that can explode, but IK Pegasi — a Sirius-like binary composed of a normal star and a white dwarf — will also one day blow. At a distance of 150 light years, it's truly the closest supernova candidate. Happily, that's too far away to damage the Earth when it goes off — and it won't explode for millions of years at least, by which time it'll be even farther away. Either way, we're safe... for now."
Okay... we're safe. Next question... (Score:1)
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Are We Zoned For This? (Score:5, Funny)
I'll have to go down to the local planning office in Alpha Centauri and see if they've got a permit for a supernova that close to the planned hyperspace bypass...
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Holy Shit Batman! (Score:3)
Wow! Thank Gawd for that! I mean, I can finally sleep at night again knowing we won't be roasted by a supernova. Truly that loomed the largest of all for me, right after the thought that my house sat on top of a supervolcano. How could I survive that? I'm not Pierce Brosnan after all.
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Fuck pal, thanks a lot. Back to my endless insomnia.
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Betelgeuse could have gone supernova any minute now. It's farther out though at 640 ly.
FTFY. Speed of light and all.
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He was right the first time, when we observe it is when it happened as far as we're concerned. Relativity and all.
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Actually the first one is not likely... however regarding the second... just today I read that the city of Naples is giving the green light to drill the first of what will ultimately be a 4,000 meter hydrothermal energy vent into the Campi Flegrei [nature.com] super volcano caldera just outside Naples. Scientists are worried about earthquakes and the remote possibility of precipitating an eruption. I find this far more sleep depriving than any thought of astronomical events. Oh and if you follow the story links, the onl
Eta Carinae and the definition of near (Score:3)
I thought Eta Carinae [wikipedia.org] was the one we were supposed to worry about. It blew off an outer layer in the 1800's. It's supermassive and it is due to go any moment now. In fact it may have already blown and we're just waiting for the news.
And near can mean a few different things in space. Which would you prefer, being a foot away from a firecracker or a mile away from a nuclear bomb?
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At 7500+ LY, we'll have a good view, but we don't need to worry about it going SN. Now, if it collapses into a black hole that happens to point a gamma ray jet directly at us, we might have something to worry about.
Re:Eta Carinae and the definition of near (Score:5, Insightful)
When you're standing 2 metres away from someone, and they say "hey, what are you doing now?", do you reply "did you mean 0.0000000066712819 seconds ago?"
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Its moot, if you look at the lobes on the Homunculus Nebula in the Hubble image, you'll clearly see the axis of Eta Carinae is pointed nowhere near us.
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Which would you prefer, being a foot away from a firecracker or a mile away from a nuclear bomb?
What kind of firecracker? I'm going with the nuke since my doctor says I should say away from salt... I should be safe in my bunker a mile underground, where the crackers are unsalted.
Slow News Day (Score:1)
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Add that to rocks are hard and water's wet!!!
Who cares? Wrong question.... (Score:2, Insightful)
So what? the nearest star that can explode as a supernova? What good will knowing that mean if it's millions of years away?
The RIGHT question is:
What's the closest star we can SEE with the naked EYE go supernova that has a reasonable chance of any of us slashdotters viewing in our lifetimes. That IS important as it matters to the average person who might just look up.
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The closest canidate may be the one overhead (Score:1)
Children tend to play with toys in their crib first.. then with the ones in the neighbors backyard.
Just say'in..
But we're a habitually meddlesome species.. we can't see to leave well enough alone.
While we're workin on the stellar engineering degree there's bound to be a few.. "whoopsies"
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Oh yeah.. just ask the Ganymedens about their project Icarus.. that ended well [ http://www.amazon.com/The-Gentle-Giants-Ganymede-2/dp/0345323270 ]
A spaceship, a blackhole and alien refugees fleeing a dying sun.
Just another day a the the beach 25 millions years long.
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Hmmm.... (Score:2)
I'd have to say that if this criteria is for a "supernova candidate", the nearest supernova candidate to us would be THE SUN. Because it's bound to go supernova one day, just like every other star in the universe.
The next nearest supernova candidate would be proxima centauri. But it probably won't cause any damage to the Earth either, and probably isn't likely to go off for a few million years either.
Damn, I should've been an astronomer - if this is all it takes to "make news".
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And yes, I do know that not all stars go supernova. Folks, RTFA rather than relying on the summary. The summary should have been better written, and that's what I was aiming for - a little silliness, and a jab about the summary on /. being very unclear on a few points. :)
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Hendersj, realising he said something really dumb, tries to pull his fat out of the fire but burns his fingers, sets the sleeve of his Neanderthal rabbit-fur-coat alight, starts screaming, and then rolls around on the ground trying to put out the signs that he indeed did do something dumb.
And then says "I meant to do that."
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BMO
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You don't do satire, do you?
BMO, realizing that he wrote a reply to something without reading the follow-up post, tries to cover up his stupidity by saying something else that's stupid.
Well, done.
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I'd have to say that if this criteria is for a "supernova candidate", the nearest supernova candidate to us would be THE SUN. Because it's bound to go supernova one day,
And you would be completely wrong in all respects.
The size of the Sun makes it impossible to become a supernova. It will grow to a red giant, throw off gas, and shrink to a white dwarf. There will be no supernova.
The next nearest supernova candidate would be proxima centauri.
No, you would be wrong *again* since none of the Centauri stars
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Did you bother to read my reply to myself? I indicated I understood it, that this was intended satirically.
You fail at reading. Hard.
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Your first post in this thread was reminiscent of Sarah Palin ranting about fruit fly studies. In fact, the post you made is typical of the ignorati that infest American politics and rather dumb individuals everywhere.
Your trying to cover up for it by saying it's a joke doesn't take away from the fact it wasn't funny in the first place, or from the fact that it reeked of deliberate ignorance as seen every goddamned day on Fox and other Rupert Murdoch properties.
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BMO
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That you didn't find it funny is fine. I don't post a lot on /., so I don't expect everyone to understand when I'm being funny. But no, I'm not trying to "cover up" that it was stupid. It was intended to be stupid, but I neglected to put sufficient context in there. I didn't take my audience into consideration (I usually write things like this to people who know me well enough to know when I'm being satirical or silly about something).
I actually do have a bit of a background in astronomy, and I read Phi
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The thing about satire is that if you are too close to what you are satirizing, you may run afoul of Poe's Law.
What you did was true to the Nathan Poe's original version of his law.
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Poe's_Law [rationalwiki.org]
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BMO
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Yup. That thought occurred to me after you "called me out". Not a lot of people are familiar with Poe's Law (though more are now).
So something good comes out of my error. :)
The scary one to me is Wolf-Rayet 104 (Score:1)
Ok, I googled wr 104 and the latest opinion is that we're not looking down the barrel of a gun. Just wait until some new observation says we are, or we find out the hard way that we are.
Still in danger (Score:3)
The issue isn't the physical damage from the expanding nebula but the intense energy (mostly gamma-ray) burst that happens when the star collapses. Basically anything within a few hundred light years gets hammered by a shotgun of energy if it's aligned with the poles of the star.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma-ray_burst [wikipedia.org]
http://f64.nsstc.nasa.gov/gbm/ [nasa.gov]
More reading on our monitoring attempts, though anything that would hit us would be noticed pretty much about the time it hit us.
Seriously? (Score:1)