For the first time, astronomers witnessed a massive star explode in a flaming supernova, and the experience was far more intense than they had anticipated.
According to a recent study published Jan. 6 in the Astrophysical Journal, researchers started observing the dying star, a red supergiant known as SN 2020tlf that is 120 million light-years from Earth, more than 100 days before its last, cataclysmic collapse. The star erupted with intense flashes of light during that period, and huge globs of gas exploded out of the star's surface.The researchers claimed that earlier observations of red
supergiants on the verge of exploding showed no signs of strong emissions, thus
these pre-supernova fireworks were a huge surprise.
"This is a breakthrough in our understanding of what massive stars do moments before they die," lead study author Wynn Jacobson-Galán, a research fellow at the University of California, Berkeley said in a statement. "For the first time, we watched a red supergiant star explode!"
When big stars go boom
The volume of red supergiant stars, which may reach hundreds
or perhaps more than a thousand times the radius of the sun, makes them the
largest stars in the cosmos. Red supergiants are neither the brightest nor the
largest stars in the universe, despite their bulk.
Similar to our sun, the nuclear fusion of atoms in the
centres of these enormous stars produces energy. Red supergiants, however, can
create considerably heavier elements than the hydrogen and helium that our sun
burns because they are so large. Supergiants' cores heat up and pressurise up
as they burn ever-more-massive materials. These stars eventually run out of
energy, their cores collapse, and they violently blast their gaseous outer atmospheres
into space in a type II supernova explosion before they can begin fusing iron
and nickel.
Scientists have studied the aftermath of these cosmic
explosions and have observed red supergiants before they go supernova, but they
have never witnessed the entire process in action until now.
In the summer of 2020, the team behind the new study started
studying SN 2020tlf as it flickered with brilliant bursts of radiation that
they later determined to be gas erupting off the star's surface. utilising the
Pan-STARRS1 telescope at the University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy and
the W. At Mauna Kea's M. Keck Observatory, the team kept track of the irritable
star for 130 days. Finally, the star went boom at the conclusion of that time.
At the moment of the explosion, the scientists observed
evidence of a dense cloud of gas encircling the star; this cloud of gas was
probably the same as that which the star had previously ejected, according to
the researchers. This shows that the star's cataclysmic explosions began occurring
long before the core of the star collapsed in the fall of 2020.
"We've never confirmed such violent activity in a dying red supergiant star where we see it produce such a luminous emission, then collapse and combust, until now," study co-author Raffaella Margutti, an astrophysicist at UC Berkeley, said in the statement.
The scientists came to the conclusion that these findings
indicate red supergiants suffer major internal structural changes that result
in uncontrolled gas explosions in the months just prior to crashing.
Originally published on Live Science.
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