Summary
RedShift
Astronomical
Aviation
Encyclopedias
Games
Show the last entries for a time period:
 IndexOur GalaxyStarsVariable starsSupernovae
Heavyweight Contender - Physical Review Focus article
Supernova explosions at the ends of stars' lives produce most of the elements heavier than iron. But theorists have had trouble cooking up models of supernovae that make the heaviest elements in their observed abundances.
 
Supernovae
Some facts.
 
A Supernova Starfield
APOD's image (February 9, 1999) with explanation.
 
Supernovae (information from Astrophysical Directions)
Some information. Historical observation of Supernovae in our galaxy.
 
Historical Supernovae
Supernovae sightings.
 
Supernovae (information at the University of Tennessee)
Image. Some facts.
 
Unveiling Black Holes in a Supernova Cauldron
Complete article from the Mercury Magazine.
 
A Supernova Puzzle is Resolved
Physical Review Focus article.
 
Why Should We Care About Exploding Stars?
Article from Teachers' Newsletter "The Universe in the Classroom".
 
"Supernova Debris in the Solar System" by G. Jeffrey Taylor
An article at Planetary Science Research Discoveries website.
 
Supernovae, the Most Energetic Objects in the Universe
Article by Wesley Colley.
 
Supernova Taxonomy
A Supernovae Taxonomy Flow Chart by M. Montes
 
Supernovae, Supernova Remnants and Young Earth Creationism FAQ
Article by Dave Moore
 
What is a supernova
Fact file from National Maritime Museum/Royal Greenwich Observatory.
 
The cataclysm : supernovae
Supernovae description at "Knowing the universe and its secrets" website.
 
SAI Supernova catalog
Supernova catalogue by Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow, Russia.
 
Supernovae
Introduction to supernovae at NASA's Imagine the Universe website.
 
Latest Supernovae
A list currently observable supernovae along with information on their location, reference images, and their last reported brightness by David Bishop.
 
Supernova Remnants
Supernovae and supernova remnants images and information from Anglo-Australian Observatory.
 
Chandra - X-Ray Sources - Supernovae and Supernova Remnants
Brief introduction to evolution of supernovae and supernova remnants with illustrations from Chandra X-ray Observatory Center.
 
Extragalactic Supernovae Search
A group of Italian amateur astronomers which carries out systematical observation of galaxies for the searching of extragalactic supernovae since 1992.
 
International Supernovae Network
The International Supernovae Network has the purpose to help contacts and share information among supernovae enthusiasts both amateurs and astronomers worldwide.
 
Supernovae, Neutron Stars & Pulsars
Gene Smith's Astronomy Tutorial at the University of California, San Diego website.
 
HubbleSite - News Releases about supernovae
Hubble Space Telescope news releases related to supernovae including images made by HST.
 
Supernova Cosmology Project
A project of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory aimed at measuring of the cosmological parameters using Type Ia supernovae as tools.
 
High Energy Astrophysics Picture Of the Week, August 6, 2001: First X-rays from SN 1987A
On February 23, 1987, a massive blue star in the Large Magellanic Cloud exploded. The image shows the first positive detection of the supernova, obtained by the ROSAT Position Sensitive Proportional Counter imager.
 
Identified: the great exploding star of 1987
An article provided by European Space Agency on supernova 1987A observation by astronomical satellite IUE.
 
Curious About Astronomy? Supernovae
Supernovae webpage by "Ask an Astronomer" service at Cornell University including links to relevant Internet resources.
 
The Physics of Type Ia Supernova Explosions - A European Research Training Network
The main focus of the SN Ia Research Training Network lies on the detailed observation of nearby Type Ia Supernovae. A number of such objects has been observed in course of the RTN campaign. The analysis of the obtained high-quality observational data has provided new insights to the physical mechanisms underlying Type Ia supernova explosions.
 
Supernova
Information on supernovae by Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
 
The supernova that just won't fade away - ESA press release
Scientists have found that a star that exploded in 1979 is as bright today in X-ray light as it was when it was discovered years ago, a surprise finding because such objects usually fade significantly after only a few months.
 
SNEWS: The SuperNova Early Warning System
The SNEWS project involves an international collaboration of experimenters representing current supernova neutrino detectors. In addition, gravitational wave detectors will be involved. The goal of SNEWS is to provide the astronomical community with a prompt alert of the occurrence of a Galactic core collapse event.
 
SUPERNOVAE
An online lecture at the Ohio State University website by professor Barbara Ryden.
 
Variable stars
Introduction to supernovae at the web site of Johannesburg Centre, Astronomical Society of Southern Africa.
 
Cosmology with Supernovae: The High-Z Supernova Search
The High-Z SN Search Team is an international group of astronomers interested in using type Ia supernovae to trace the expansion of the Universe from the present day to 9 billion years in the Past.
 
Exploding Stars Explained? - Sky and Telescope article
Astronomers have discovered that sound waves rattling through a massive star can make it go supernova.
 
Supernova
Supernovae description from the Encyclopedia of Astrobiology, Astronomy, and Spaceflight by David Darling.
 
Supernovae description from the Astronomy Knowledge Base
Supernovae parameters and properties.
 
NASA - Supernova
An article about supernovae by World Book @ NASA.
 
How to Blow Up a Star - a Scientific American article
It is not as easy as you would think. Models of supernovae have failed to reproduce these explosions -- until recently.
 
Supernovae
A gallery of supernova images by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory.
 
Astronomy's "Impossible" Supernova? - a Skytonight article
For decades, one of the canonical doctrines in astronomy is that a white dwarf cannot exceed 1.44 solar masses. But now astronomers have found a Type Ia supernova that seems to break the rules.
 
Hypernova Reveals Hidden Identity As Gamma-Ray Burst
An international research team, led by astronomers from the University of Tokyo, Hiroshima University, and the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, used the Subaru telescope to obtain the spectrum of SN2003jd, a hypernova unaccompanied by a gamma-ray burst, and found the first evidence that it is a jet-like explosion viewed off-axis. Hypernovae are hyper-energetic Supernovae that are often associated with gamma-ray bursts. This result provides clear and firm evidence that all Hypernovae may be associated with gamma-ray bursts, but that gamma-ray bursts are observable only when jets produced by the hypernova explosion point towards Earth.
 
Asymmetric Ashes - ESO Science Release
Astronomers are reporting remarkable new findings that shed light on a decade-long debate about one kind of supernovae, the explosions that mark a star's final demise: does the star die in a slow burn or with a fast bang? From their observations, the scientists find that the matter ejected by the explosion shows significant peripheral asymmetry but a nearly spherical interior, most likely implying that the explosion finally propagates at supersonic speed.
 
X-ray evidence supports possible new class of supernova - ESA press release
Evidence for a significant new class of supernova has been found with the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton and NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory.
 
Supernovae are Not Spherical (or round) - Subaru Dissects the Interior of Exploding Stars
A research team of astronomers from Tokyo University, Hiroshima University and so on, observed 15 supernovae at 200 or more days after the explosion, using FOCAS at Subaru Telescope. Contrary to the traditional view as spherically symmetric expansion, they revealed that supernovae are commonly asymmetric.
 
The Gobbling Dwarf that Exploded: VLT Provides Evidence for Type Ia Supernovae Scenario - ESO science release
A unique set of observations, obtained with ESO's VLT, has allowed astronomers to find direct evidence for the material that surrounded a star before it exploded as a Type Ia supernova. This strongly supports the scenario in which the explosion occurred in a system where a white dwarf is fed by a red giant.
 
ROSAT Images - Supernovae and Supernova Remnants
X-Ray images of supernovae and supernova remnants made with the ROSAT telescope.
 
White Dwarf 'Sibling Rivalry' Explodes into Supernova
Astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) have found that a supernova discovered last year was caused by two colliding white dwarf stars. The white dwarfs were siblings orbiting each other. They slowly spiraled inward until they merged, touching off a titanic explosion. CfA observations show the strongest evidence yet of what was, until now, a purely theoretical mechanism for creating a supernova.
 
Publishing / RedShift / RedShift 3 / News
All rights reserved. © Maris Technologies Ltd. and its licensors, 2008 Credits
For more information contact Maris:  info@maris.com