three stages of a simulated supernova explosion over a period of 50 milliseconds, starting about 400 milliseconds after the core begins to collapse.The surfaces show the material which is flowing ...
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US uses world’s first exascale supercomputer to model supernovae, fusion reactors
US scientists have turned to the world’s first exascale supercomputer, the Frontier, to unlock ...
Giant stars die a violent death. After a life of several million years, they collapse into themselves and then explode in what is known as a supernova. How these stars explode remains a mystery.
Theoretical models of supernova chemistry overhauled after X-ray data from Perseus Cluster reveal key discrepancies by SUNY Polytechnic Institute edited by Gaby Clark, reviewed by Robert Egan Editors' ...
When a star explodes at the end of its lifetime, it smears the elements forged in its heart across vast stretches of space. The results, dramatic designs of gas and dust known as supernova remnants, ...
Researchers have found white dwarf stars with masses close to the maximum stable mass are likely to produce large amounts of manganese, iron, and nickel after it orbits another star and explodes.
Astronomers call this "eruptive mass loss," and it's a stellar drama we're still trying to fully grasp.
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