News on Stars
- Discovery of 'Ultra-cool' dwarf-star
- Oslo-experiment may explain massive star explosions
- The globular cluster M55
- Type 1a supernova have 2 sources
- Star surrounded by rare disk of quarts dust
- Aging star erupting with dust, as it prepartes for
- An old star with some new tricks
- The origin of brown dwarf substellar objects
- Black hole outburst i the M83 galaxy
- Star torn apart by black hole identified
- The last gasps of ligth from a dying star
- A star-cluster within another cluster
- Astronomers detect coolest dwarf-star
- The lives of supergiants stars
- Discovery of 2 nearby white dwarf stars
- Comet massacre around nearby star
- Black Holes grow, by eating stars
- Stars explode inside-out
- Watch a star explode
- New theory on size of black holes
- Origin of Class 1a supernovae narrowed down
- Panets figth over popular orbits
- Best-ever image of globular star-cluster
- Sister-stars drifting apart
- Rare peek at early stage of star formation
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Supernova-mystery may be solved
Tuesday, 08 November 2011 22:46
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| Astronomy - Stars |
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Type II supernovae has allways contained a bit of a puzzle: They start as a collapsing star, but in theory the shock-wave in the collaps is so extreme that it should stall Physicists have a new theory on the mysterious mechanism that causes the explosion of massive, or core, stars. These ‘Type II supernovae’, the term given to exploding core stars, are huge and spectacular events - intriguing because for a short time they emit as much light as is normally produced by an entire galaxy. In fact, the enormous amount of energy they release is second only to the Big Bang itself. While there is general agreement on how the collapse of a core star begins, how the energy escapes from the star (the process that causes the explosion) is not fully understood. A paper published in Physics Letters B (3 November 2011) offers a new theoretical explanation.
Physicists at the University of Aberdeen, STFC’s Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, the University of Strathclyde and the Instituto Superior Técnico in Lisbon suggest in Physics Letter B that the solution to the Type II supernovae mystery might lie in a fundamental field long proposed by physicists to answer many important questions. They claim that a component of gravity called the ‘scalar gravitational field’ may be the driving force behind the release of energy that causes the star to finally explode. The existence of scalar fields are predicted but have not yet been detected. Sources: Article in Science Direct and press-release READ MORE on Scalar fields at Yale |





