
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Hercules climbs into good view in the east and northeast a couple of hours after sunset. His torso is outlined by a lopsided square of stars known as the Keystone.
The constellation produced a big bang that was seen last June. It was cataloged as AT2018cow, and nicknamed “the Cow.”
The Cow was a fast-evolving luminous transient — a class of objects first seen only in the last few years. They flare up in a few days — far quicker than a typical supernova, which is a huge stellar explosion. And astronomers are having a tough time deciding what powers them.
A transient discovered in 2015, by the Kepler space telescope, flared up in just two days. Some astronomers suggested it was a supernova, but an odd one: The blast ran into gas around the star, producing a brilliant shock wave.
A couple of years later, another team produced another explanation for these transients: the merger of two stellar corpses known as white dwarfs.
The Cow produced even more possible explanations. One says that a massive star collapsed to form a black hole. “Jets” of material from the star rammed into the gas around it, creating the fireworks. Another explanation is that a black hole was eating a “normal” star. And yet another says the outburst was produced by a supernova with little gas around it. That allowed space telescopes to see gas falling onto a newborn neutron star or black hole — a possible explanation for some “flashy” stars.
Script by Damond Benningfield
4.6
251251 ratings
Hercules climbs into good view in the east and northeast a couple of hours after sunset. His torso is outlined by a lopsided square of stars known as the Keystone.
The constellation produced a big bang that was seen last June. It was cataloged as AT2018cow, and nicknamed “the Cow.”
The Cow was a fast-evolving luminous transient — a class of objects first seen only in the last few years. They flare up in a few days — far quicker than a typical supernova, which is a huge stellar explosion. And astronomers are having a tough time deciding what powers them.
A transient discovered in 2015, by the Kepler space telescope, flared up in just two days. Some astronomers suggested it was a supernova, but an odd one: The blast ran into gas around the star, producing a brilliant shock wave.
A couple of years later, another team produced another explanation for these transients: the merger of two stellar corpses known as white dwarfs.
The Cow produced even more possible explanations. One says that a massive star collapsed to form a black hole. “Jets” of material from the star rammed into the gas around it, creating the fireworks. Another explanation is that a black hole was eating a “normal” star. And yet another says the outburst was produced by a supernova with little gas around it. That allowed space telescopes to see gas falling onto a newborn neutron star or black hole — a possible explanation for some “flashy” stars.
Script by Damond Benningfield
6,133 Listeners
1,190 Listeners
1,345 Listeners
43,969 Listeners
2,866 Listeners
336 Listeners
544 Listeners
804 Listeners
221 Listeners
320 Listeners
6,271 Listeners
287 Listeners
851 Listeners
363 Listeners
505 Listeners