Questions tagged [supernova]

A supernova is the explosive death of a star.

Supernovae are classified into 'types' according to their spectrum:

Type I

The observed spectrum has no evidence of hydrogen.

  • Type Ia: Presence of Si II (615 nm) absorption line.
  • Type Ib/c: No Si II line.
    • Type Ib: Presence of He I (586.6 nm) absorption line.
    • Type Ic: No He I line.

Type II

The observed spectrum has strong emission and absorption features due to hydrogen.

  • Type II-P/L/n:
    • Type IIP/L: No narrow spectral lines.
      • Type IIP: Light curve reaches a plateau.
      • Type IIL: Magnitude vs. time decreases linearly. -Type IIn: Presence of narrow spectral lines.
  • Type IIb: Spectrum changes to later resemble Type Ib.

Origin

All types of supernova with the exception of Ia are thought to result from the collapse of the core of a massive star (more than ~8x the mass of the Sun), followed by its 'rebound', resulting in a violent explosion. These are broadly termed 'core collapse supernovae'. Which type of spectrum is observed then depends on the properties of the particular star in question. After the explosion, in most cases there is a stellar remnant left over, either a neutron star or black hole, with more massive progenitor stars typically resulting in the latter.

Type Ia are thought to be the runaway thermonuclear explosion of white dwarf stars. This occurs when the white dwarf exceeds the mass limit of ~1.44x the mass of the Sun. There are two proposed scenarios by which a white dwarf could exceed this limit. In the 'single degenerate' scenario, the white dwarf accretes material from a companion star, while in the 'double degenerate' scenario, it merges with a second white dwarf. Both are likely to occur in nature, but which scenario is most common, and how this depends on the properties of the local stellar population, is an area of active research.

Light curves

Along with the spectrum, a 'light curve', the luminosity of the object as a function of time, is often observed. The light curves of Type Ia events are of particular interest, since they have been shown to be 'standardizable candles', that is to say that based on the properties of the spectrum and light curve, the intrinsic luminosity can be inferred. This in turn allows for a measurement of the distance to the object. (The relationship has been calibrated using SN-Ia events with independently measured distances.) Because they are so bright, SN-Ia can be observed to cosmologically large distances. The combination of SN-Ia luminosity distances and redshift measurements of their host galaxies has notably been used to measure the acceleration of cosmological expansion.

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Do nearby gamma ray busts/supernova damage more than just the ozone layer?

So we know that many people are putting hard constraints on the galactic habitability zone based on the presence of nearby supernova/gamma ray bursts. But if they only affect the ozone layer, then I doubt that it's as hard of a constraint as many…
InquilineKea
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Number of visible supernovas exploding right now

How many supernovas are going off (visible in principle) right now in the Universe?
JMorehouse
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Where is the remnant of the supernova that killed off the Megalodon?

The claim is that a supernova about 150 light years from earth triggered a mass extinction about 2.6 million years ago which, among other things, killed off the…
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How long does or will Super Nova remnant be detectable/observable?

I am attempting to pin down the data on just how many Super Nova have occurred in the history of our Milky Way solar system. How can scientist detect the remains of a Supernova and for how long after that Supernova occurres can we reliably detect…
Brando
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What are the differences/similarities between supernova and helium flash?

I tried to search the internet but could not find a direct comparison. Is there any link between supernova and helium flash? If so, what is it? otherwise how they are different?
kpv
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Remnant of a supernova

A supernova remnant is the structure resulting from the explosion of a giant star. The supernova remnant is surrounded by an expanding shock wave that is formed from material ejected by the explosion and interstellar material swept away during the…
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Supernova explosions

It's generally accepted by astrophysicist that all the atoms and molecules in our bodies are recycled stellar waste from supernovi explosions, that even the matter in our sun came from a supernova explosion. Now, for a star to go nova, all it's fuel…