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A huge star just exploded, and you can actually see it
Views: 4126
2023-05-24 17:48
Boom. In the colossal Pinwheel galaxy, 25 million light-years away, a star has just exploded

Boom.

In the colossal Pinwheel galaxy, 25 million light-years away, a star has just exploded and is even visible through small telescopes. The supernova-hunting astronomer Koichi Itagaki discovered the radiant anomaly in the sky on May 19, enticing other scientists to train telescopes on the object.

Not all stars explode fantastically, in dramatic events called supernovae, at the end of their stellar lives. But stars around eight times the mass of the sun or larger do after exhausting their fuel and collapsing. Just over a decade ago, astronomers spotted a previous starburst in the Pinwheel galaxy, also known as Messier 101. Now it's happened again.

"Messier 101, the 'Pinwheel' galaxy, did it again," astronomer Gianluca Masi, who runs the sky-viewing endeavor the Virtual Telescope Project, wrote online. "After supernova SN 2011fe, one of the brightest ones of the last decades, this stunning 'cosmic island' offers us another huge cosmic explosion: supernova SN 2023ixf."

SEE ALSO: The most fascinating star in our sky inches closer to exploding

How to see the exploded star

You can't see the radiant explosion with the naked eye. But you can see it with small telescopes, Masi noted. And you can easily see it in Masi's image below. He also plans a viewing livestream of the supernova on May 25 beginning at 22:00 UT (17:00 ET, or 5 p.m. ET).

To us, even through telescopes, the supernova is a dot because it's profoundly far away. Remember, this didn't happen in our Milky Way galaxy — this is an entirely different galaxy. Yet it's positioned "head on" toward us, generally making the Pinwheel galaxy a sight to see. It's also huge. "The giant spiral disk of stars, dust, and gas is 170,000 light-years across — nearly twice the diameter of our galaxy, the Milky Way," NASA explains. "M101 is estimated to contain at least one trillion stars."

The arrow designates the newly discovered supernova in the Pinwheel galaxy. Credit: Gianluca Masi / Virtual Telescope Project

In cosmic terms, however, the Pinwheel galaxy is still relatively nearby. That makes this explosion all the more special. A supernova event happening this close to us only happens "around once a decade," tweeted Andy Howell, an astronomer who observed and researched the Pinwheel galaxy's previous supernova in 2011.

"You should be able to see it with backyard telescopes, for a few months, though it will just be a point of light," Howell added.

Fortunately, for those who endeavor to view the the Pinwheel galaxy on their own, it's a well-known place in the cosmos and regularly viewed by stargazers when it's visible. It's near the end of the handle of the Big Dipper constellation, which is marked by the star Alkaid. (The Big Dipper is also part of the bigger constellation Ursa Major, which you can see below.)

A guide to seeing the Pinwheel galaxy, aka "M101," near the Big Dipper/Ursa Major. Credit: NASA

And while none of us has a school bus-sized telescope orbiting Earth, NASA does. Here's what the Pinwheel galaxy looks like through the legendary Hubble Space Telescope — though this detailed image was released in 2017, years before the recent supernova:

The majestic Pinwheel galaxy as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope. Credit: Hubble Image: NASA / ESA / K. Kuntz (JHU) / F. Bresolin (University of Hawaii) / J. Trauger (Jet Propulsion Lab) / J. Mould (NOAO) / Y.-H. Chu (University of Illinois, Urbana) / STScI // CFHT Image: Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope / J.-C. Cuillandre / Coelum; NOAO Image: G. Jacoby / B. Bohannan / M. Hanna / NOAO / AURA / NSF

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In our galaxy, there are giant stars getting tantalizing close, or closer, to exploding. Some of the red giant stars, like Betelgeuse in the constellation Orion, will appear extremely bright in the night sky, outshining all other stars, when it eventually explodes.

Keep watching.

"We don't know where the next supernova will come from," Or Graur, an associate professor of astronomy at the University of Portsmouth who researches supernovae, recently told Mashable.