• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Strange Rare Star Explosion Spied By Hubble Where It Shouldn’t Be

October 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

For the last five years, astronomers have been spotting peculiar stellar explosions that don’t behave like any other known. These rare events are known as Luminous Fast Blue Optical Transients (LFBOT) – you may even remember the first one, nicknamed the “Cow” (AT2018cow). Already strange, they just got stranger as Hubble has observed one happening where it defintely shouldn’t be.

LFBOTS are among the brightest visible events in the universe but they are very rare; on average, just one a year has been discovered since 2018. They are similar to supernovae or gamma-ray bursts, becoming incredibly bright but they fade away in a matter of days, unlike supernovae that take weeks or months.

Advertisement

The best explanation for them has been considered a special type of supernova from extremely massive stars. These LFBOTs happen in the spiral arms of star-forming galaxies, which is exactly where massive stars would live their extremely short lives. So imagine astronomers’ surprise when they tracked one of these events with Hubble and found it happening in intergalactic space.

AT2023fhn, nicknamed the “Finch”, has all the characteristics of the other handful of LFBOT discovered so far apart from its location inexplicably in the empty space between two galaxies. It’s about 50,000 light-years from the large spiral galaxy and about 15,000 light-years from the small galaxy.

“The more we learn about LFBOTs, the more they surprise us,” said lead author Ashley Chrimes, a European Space Agency Research Fellow, in a statement. “We’ve now shown that LFBOTs can occur a long way from the center of the nearest galaxy, and the location of the Finch is not what we expect for any kind of supernova.”

Image titled

The bright dot is the explosion known as the Finch, far away from the galaxies around it.

Image Credit: NASA, ESA, STScI, Ashley Chrimes (ESA-ESTEC/Radboud University)

The Finch, which is a scorching 20,000°C (36,000 °F), is definitely an LFBOT; data from the Gemini South telescope, Chandra X-ray Observatory, and the Very Large Array radio telescope, confirmed it. 

Advertisement

A massive star that could produce such an explosion would live for only a few million years, like the one that produced the flattest known explosion. It would not have the time to travel far away from either galaxy before dying. 

If a supernova seems unlikely, the team suggests that there might be a different path to an LFBOT. Maybe here, we are witnessing an intermediate-mass black hole (between 100 and 100,000 times the mass of the Sun) ripping apart a star. These black holes could exist in globular clusters of stars orbiting galaxies.

Another alternative is a merger between neutron stars. A pair of neutron stars might take billions of years before they spiral into each other, plenty of time to be kicked out of their galaxy, maybe in the original supernova explosions that formed them.

However, “The discovery poses many more questions than it answers,” Chrimes admitted. “More work is needed to figure out which of the many possible explanations is the right one.”

Advertisement

The study is accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society and is available on the ArXiv.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – FIFA backs down on threat to fine Premier clubs who play South American players
  2. U.S. House passes abortion rights bill, outlook poor in Senate
  3. Two children killed in missile strikes on Yemen’s Marib – state news agency
  4. We’ve Breached Six Of The Nine “Planetary Boundaries” For Sustaining Human Civilization

Source Link: Strange Rare Star Explosion Spied By Hubble Where It Shouldn't Be

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Alien Abduction Or A Trick Of The Mind? A Down To Earth Explanation Of Close Encounters
  • Six Months Into Trump’s Presidency, Americans Report Record Low Pride In Being American
  • TikToker Unknowingly Handles Extremely Venomous Cone Snail And Lives To Tell The Tale
  • Scientists Sequence Oldest Egyptian DNA To Date, From A Whopping 4,800 Years Ago
  • “Uncharted Waters”: Large Hadron Collider Begins Colliding Oxygen For The First Time
  • 125,000-Year-Old Neanderthal “Fat Factory” Shows They Gorged On Bone Grease
  • On July 3, Earth Will Reach Its Farthest Point From The Sun – 152 Million Kilometers Away
  • NASA’s Perseverance Rover May Have Recorded Evidence Of Electrified Dust Devils On Mars
  • “Hymn to Babylon”: Missing Mesopotamian Text Dating Back Nearly 3,000 Years Discovered
  • Multiple New Species Of Cute Spotty And Stripy Geckos Discovered In Remote Cambodia
  • ChatGPT May Be Surprisingly Good At Piloting Spacecraft, Taking 2nd Place In Spaceflight Competition
  • Incredible Supernova Finding Shows That “Double-Detonation Mechanism” Happens In Nature
  • Soda Cans, Asthma Inhalers, And… Water Bottles? All Things That Could Explode In Your Car This Summer
  • Video: Is There An Ideal Sleeping Position?
  • If You Look Up At The Right Time Today, You Will See A Giant “X” On The Moon
  • We May Have Our Third Interstellar Visitor And It’s Nothing Like The Previous Two
  • Orcas Filmed Kissing (With Tongues) In The Wild For The First Time
  • How Easy Is It For A Country To Change Its Time Zone?
  • Earth’s First Commercial Space Station Set To Launch In 2026
  • Black Hole Moon: Rogue Planets With Weird Signatures Could Be A Sign Of Advanced Alien Life
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version