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Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2024 5:25 pm
by weatheriscool

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2024 6:19 pm
by firestar464
https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/news/update-g ... il-23-2023

NOAA report:

What implications is this supposed to have?

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2024 9:25 pm
by Powers
firestar464 wrote: Sun Mar 24, 2024 6:19 pm https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/news/update-g ... il-23-2023

NOAA report:

What implications is this supposed to have?
Nothing apparently?

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2024 11:06 pm
by caltrek
Powers wrote: Sun Mar 24, 2024 9:25 pm
firestar464 wrote: Sun Mar 24, 2024 6:19 pm https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/news/update-g ... il-23-2023

NOAA report:

What implications is this supposed to have?
Nothing apparently?
(The Hill) …on Sunday, the SWPC (Space Weather Prediction Center) warned that the storm had reached “severe” G4 conditions. Those conditions could change into Monday, the agency said in a Sunday evening update.

The G4 storming observed Sunday is considered “severe,” the SWPC notes, saying a storm of this caliber is “a major disturbance in Earth’s magnetic field; often varying intensity between lower levels and severe storm conditions over the course of the event.” As alarming as it may sound, the agency is advising otherwise.

“The public should not anticipate adverse impacts and no action is necessary, but they should stay properly informed of storm progression by visiting our webpage,” the SWPC said in a Sunday update, adding that “infrastructure operators have been notified to take action to mitigate any possible impacts.”

Officials also noted that there may be increased and more frequent voltage control problems that are “normally mitigable;” an increased chance at “anomalies or effects to satellite operations;” and “more frequent and longer periods of GPS degradation possible.
https://thehill.com/homenews/nexstar_me ... t-to-know/

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Wed Mar 27, 2024 1:25 pm
by wjfox

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Wed Mar 27, 2024 4:55 pm
by firestar464
https://phys.org/news/2024-03-stunning- ... birth.html

Stunning James Webb images show birth and death of massive stars

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Wed Mar 27, 2024 9:33 pm
by firestar464
https://phys.org/news/2024-03-analysis- ... -hole.html

New analysis reveals a tiny black hole repeatedly punching through a larger black hole's disk of gas

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Mon Apr 01, 2024 5:41 pm
by weatheriscool
Supercomputer simulations decode the mass puzzle of the first stars
https://phys.org/news/2024-04-supercomp ... uzzle.html
by ASIAA

Ching-Yao Tang and Dr. Ke-Jung Chen from the Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Academia Sinica (ASIAA) have made substantial progress in decoding the birth mass of the first stars using the powerful supercomputer at Berkeley National Lab.

This new research is reported in the latest issue of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

During the earliest stages of the universe, only hydrogen and helium existed following the Big Bang, and crucial life-sustaining elements like carbon and oxygen had yet to emerge. Approximately 200 million years later, the first stars, known as Population III (Pop III) stars, began forming.

These stars initiated the production of heavier elements through nuclear burning at their cores. As these stars reached the end of their life cycles, some went supernovae, creating powerful explosions that dispersed newly synthesized elements into the early universe, becoming the foundation for life.

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2024 12:46 pm
by Time_Traveller
Brightest-ever cosmic explosion solved but new mysteries sparked
3 hours ago

Image

Researchers have discovered the cause of the brightest burst of light ever recorded.

But in doing so they have run up against two bigger mysteries, including one that casts doubt on where our heavy elements - like gold - come from.

The burst of light, spotted in 2022, is now known to have had an exploding star at its heart, researchers say.

But that explosion, by itself, would not have been sufficient to have shone so brightly.

And our current theory says that such exploding stars, known as supernovas, also produce all the heavy elements in the universe such as gold and platinum.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-68787534

Re: Stars, supernovae, black holes and stellar remnants

Posted: Fri Apr 12, 2024 7:55 pm
by weatheriscool
Stellar winds of three sun-like stars detected for the first time
https://phys.org/news/2024-04-stellar-sun-stars.html
by University of Vienna
An international research team led by a researcher from the University of Vienna has for the first time directly detected stellar winds from three sun-like stars by recording the X-ray emission from their astrospheres, and placed constraints on the mass loss rate of the stars via their stellar winds.

Astrospheres, stellar analogs of the heliosphere that surrounds our solar system, are very hot plasma bubbles blown by stellar winds into the interstellar medium, a space filled with gas and dust. The study of the stellar winds of low-mass stars similar to the sun allows us to understand stellar and planetary evolution, and ultimately the history and future of our own star and solar system. Stellar winds drive many processes that evaporate planetary atmospheres into space and therefore lead to atmospheric mass loss.