Catching a supernova in action is tricky business. There is no way to predict them, and they don’t occur very often. Within the Milky Way they only

Astronomers Catch a Supernova Explode Almost in Realtime

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2024-03-29 19:00:15

Catching a supernova in action is tricky business. There is no way to predict them, and they don’t occur very often. Within the Milky Way they only occur about once a century, and the last one was observed in 1604.

But that’s what happened last year, according to a new paper released in Nature this week. Japanese amateur astronomer Koichi Itagaki, observing a nearby galaxy named Messier 101 (colloquially known as the Pinwheel Galaxy), recognized that something special was happening. He had just observed a new supernova. It was dubbed SN 2023ixf.

The initial phase of a supernova is measured in hours, so astronomers had to act fast. Within five hours, Itagaki had reported the sighting to an international astronomical reporting database called the Transient Name Server. Less than an hour after that, professional astronomers were already rushing to turn their telescopes to look at the new explosion.

The discovery took place on May 19, a Friday night, and it was a scramble to get everything in place across multiple time zones.

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