The galaxy, known as MCG +05-43-16, is 380 million light-years from Earth. Until this year, astronomers had never sighted a supernova popping off in this stellar congregation. A supernova is an extremely energetic and life-ending explosion of a star.
Making the event even more unusual is the fact that the two supernovae belong to different types. Supernova 2007ck is a Type II event – which is triggered when the core of a massive star runs out of nuclear fuel and collapses gravitationally, producing a shock wave that blows the star to smithereens. Supernova 2007ck was first observed on May 19.
In contrast, Supernova 2007co is a Type Ia event, which occurs when a white dwarf star accretes so much material from a binary companion star that it blows up like a giant thermonuclear bomb. It was discovered on June 4, 2007. A white dwarf is the exposed core of a star after it has ejected its atmosphere; it’s approximately the size of Earth but with the mass of our Sun.
"Most galaxies have a supernova every 25 to 100 years, so it’s remarkable to have a galaxy with two supernovae discovered just 16 days apart," says Stefan Immler of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. In 2006 Immler used NASA’s Swift satellite to image two supernovae in the elliptical galaxy NGC 1316, but both of those explosions were Type Ia events, and they were discovered six months apart.
The simultaneous appearance of two supernovae in one galaxy is an extremely rare occurrence, but it’s merely a coincidence and does not imply anything unusual about MCG +05-43-16. Because the two supernovae are tens of thousands of light-years from each other, and because light travels at a finite speed, astronomers in the galaxy itself, or in a different galaxy, might record the two supernovae exploding thousands of years apart.
Robert Naeye | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.nasa.gov
www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/swift/bursts/double_supernova.html
More articles from
Physics and Astronomy:
Shielding for ambitious neutron experiment
24.07.2008 | Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB)
Accretion Discs Show Their True Colours
24.07.2008 | European Southern Observatory - ESO
Shielding for ambitious neutron experiment
24.07.2008 | Physics and Astronomy
Accretion Discs Show Their True Colours
24.07.2008 | Physics and Astronomy
Allergic rhinitis diagnosis and treatment: new guidelines for primary care professionals
24.07.2008 | Health and Medicine