The Death Star

  • Published 8 years ago
  • Not Rated

In deepest space lurks a force of almost unimaginable power. Explosions of extraordinary violence, are blasting through the Universe every day. If you hit our solar system that would destroy our Sun and all planets.

For years nobody could figure out what was causing the bang. Now scientists believe they have identified the culprit. It is the most extreme object ever found in the universe, but they have dubbed a “hypernova.”

The Cold War cosmology. The mystery began in 1967. A U.S. military satellite was launched to detect Soviet nuclear tests that the Pentagon secretly believe that taking place on the dark side of the moon. In contrast, the satellite picked up evidence of explosions far bigger than any bomb. Something that emit bursts of gamma rays – the deadliest form of energy known – on a massive scale. What’s worse, these blasts just kept coming.

Breaking the law. For decades scientists were baffled. Especially worrying is the evidence that these bursts could be coming from the farthest reaches of the universe, billions of light years away. If so, then for we see on Earth that had to be on a scale that was beyond our comprehension. According to some, these explosions were so big you could even violate the most sacred law of all science: Einstein’s famous equation on the mass and energy, E = mc ². Unless the law supports our understanding of how our universe nothing works.
Live fast, die young. It was not until 1997, when a satellite pinpointed the exact location of these explosions, that scientists began to solve the puzzle. It appears that these huge explosions are caused by the death throes of stars twenty times the size of our Sun, that burn and explode, creating hypernova. So, what developed was a chain of events that ultimately point to some of the most exotic wonders of the Universe: stellar nurseries (where new stars are born) and black holes.

Observations show that – instead of disappearing as an explosion might be expected to – radiation continues to leave the area of a hypernova. This issue is a constant feature of the process of star birth. Astronomers conclude that the hypernova grows rapidly along with other normal stars in a nursery, but burns when his contemporaries are still in their infancy.

Pointing to the past. Find a hypernova, therefore, also have traced a part of space where stellar synthesis is underway. So some scientists now believe that large hypernova explosions may be the key to open one of the great unsolved mysteries in the universe: how the first stars were made at the dawn of time.

From Around the Web

Related Videos

Technology
the challenger
youtube icon
05:51

31 years ago, NASA experienced one of the greatest disasters in the history of the space program. The space shuttle Challenger broke apart just 73 seconds into the flight.The disas...

  • 6,004
  • 6 years ago
  • 10(4)
Strange
disney ufo
youtube icon
43:24

We all know Walt Disney as the guy responsible for making the best cartoons and animated movies. He started in the revolution when he released the first Mickey Mouse cartoon....

  • 24,067
  • 6 years ago
  • 5.7(26)
Social
diamonds
youtube icon
49:05

Diamonds are woman's best friends. Diamonds are the most prestigious of all gems, and every woman would do anything to wear one on her neck.We all know that diamonds are formed und...

  • 8,271
  • 6 years ago
  • 5(5)
Strange
stars universe
youtube icon
01:35:02

The first association we get about stars in our universe is the Sun. The sun is one of the biggest stars we see on a daily basis. But the Sun is just one of the many stars in...

  • 10,362
  • 6 years ago
  • 5(3)
Avatar

4,897 Videos / 18,577,843 Views
Related Articles
Starlite was fire-retardant, and could have been used as a thermal barrier or heat-resistant coating
  • 30,623
  • 6 years ago
The Watson has come a long way since the win in Jeopardy in 2011.
  • 6,409
  • 6 years ago
More than 50 years ago, US and NASA worked on a project to send women in Space. The project, which included medical test...
  • 11,362
  • 6 years ago
Between running a print shop, starting the first lending library in America, engineering the postal system, and helping ...
  • 7,092
  • 6 years ago