The first time the meteor was shot
Astronomers yesterday were delighted to announce that they had for the first time filmed a shooting star exploded. That's why they can now learn how to observe other meteor explosions.
Astronomers yesterday were delighted to announce that they had for the first time captured the scene of a shooting star exploding. That's why they can now learn how to observe other meteor explosions.
Thanks to luck, astronomers have seized a supernova explosion while observing another area in a galaxy galaxy far away from Earth. They transferred many types of telescopes in the right direction.
'For years, we dreamed of observing stellar phenomena,' said Alicia Soderberg of Princeton University, New Jersey, USA. She is the leader of an international team of astronomers observing and studying the death of the 2008D meteor in the galaxy NGC 2770, 88 million light-years from Earth.
'On January 9, we were in the right position, at the right time, with the right telescope, and we witnessed a historic event,' she said.
Meteor is a dying star, but much larger than the sun of the Earth. First it will explode out, then shrink itself into a condensed and cold sphere. Sometimes it can become a black hole.
Summary of images observed in the explosion.(Photo: Reuters)
In fact, astronomers in Mrs. Soderberg's group are observing the event that happened 88 million years ago, but with time in Earth, they are just happening and astronomers may be interested. close to that shooting star as if they were exploding.
'Using the strongest X-ray, radio and optical telescopes on the ground and in the universe, we were able to observe the process of the explosion from the beginning,' Edo Berger, co. Soderberg's team said. 'It was finally possible to confirm the X-ray explosion that marked the' birth 'of the meteor'.
When Soderberg and her colleagues were doing a periodic observation of the star NGC 2770 with X-ray telescope on NASA's Swift satellite, they saw a bright beam of X-rays emanating from a band of NGC 2770.
Immediately 38 members of her international science group used all telescopes on the ground and in space to observe. They hope to gather information to help astronomers observe other meteorites faster.
'Future astronomical devices will allow us to solve the mystery of meteor explosions,' Soderberg said.
- Guide to observing the meteor shower of Leonids on November 17
- Impressed with 'meteor shower party'
- Meteor in the sky of Hanoi
- 4 meteor showers prove you are the luckiest
- Meteor falls to Ontario
- Orionids meteor shower 2019 - time and way of seeing
- Moonlight will hinder observing Lyrids meteor shower
- Watch the most beautiful meteor shower of the year on the morning of December 14
- There are the largest Geminids meteor showers in 2017
- The most beautiful meteor shower of the year will take place this weekend
Scientists discover a photon traveling back in time Is the moon also affected by the Covid-19 epidemic? NASA shuts down plasma device to save spacecraft 20.5 billion kilometers away Surprised to know the identity of the Russian missile debris 'hunter' A giant meteorite once crashed into Earth, 200 times larger than the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs. Discovery suggests: Earth may escape after Sun turns into red giant ESA launches Hera spacecraft to study how to protect Earth A star will explode in 2024, visible to the naked eye