Awesome. Check out the artist's rendering of the blast. I thought it was a 
mistake, possibly a picture done by a staff artist at Yahoo or something, then 
confirmed it at the NASA site ( 
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/chandra/news/chandra_bright_supernova.html ) 
That dang star blew apart at the core! Looks like comic book pictures of 
Krypton exploding or something.   Sometimes I wish we were positioned further 
in toward the core of our own galaxy, which seems to be so cool with millions 
of stars and even black holes, but I guess sometimes it's a good things the Sol 
system is out in the galactic sticks.  If we were further in toward the core, I 
guess we'd be so many scattered sub-atomic particles by now, blowing across 
space on the stellar winds...  
*************************************
NASA's Chandra Sees Brightest Supernova Ever
The brightest stellar explosion ever recorded may be a long-sought new type of 
supernova, according to observations by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and 
ground-based optical telescopes. This discovery indicates that violent 
explosions of extremely massive stars were relatively common in the early 
universe, and that a similar explosion may be ready to go off in our own 
galaxy. 
 "This was a truly monstrous explosion, a hundred times more energetic than a 
typical supernova," said Nathan Smith of the University of California at 
Berkeley, who led a team of astronomers from California and the University of 
Texas in Austin. "That means the star that exploded might have been as massive 
as a star can get, about 150 times that of our sun. We've never seen that 
before." 
Image at right: Artist's illustration of supernova SN 2006gy. Credit: 
Illustration: NASA/CXC/M.Weiss; X-ray: NASA/CXC/UC Berkeley/N.Smith et al.; IR: 
Lick/UC Berkeley/J.Bloom & C.Hansen + Full caption/large image 
Astronomers think many of the first generation of stars were this massive, and 
this new supernova may thus provide a rare glimpse of how the first stars died. 
It is unprecedented, however, to find such a massive star and witness its 
death. The discovery of the supernova, known as SN 2006gy, provides evidence 
that the death of such massive stars is fundamentally different from 
theoretical predictions. 
"Of all exploding stars ever observed, this was the king," said Alex 
Filippenko, leader of the ground-based observations at the Lick Observatory at 
Mt. Hamilton, Calif., and the Keck Observatory in Mauna Kea, Hawaii. "We were 
astonished to see how bright it got, and how long it lasted." 
The Chandra observation allowed the team to rule out the most likely 
alternative explanation for the supernova: that a white dwarf star with a mass 
only slightly higher than the sun exploded into a dense, hydrogen-rich 
environment. In that event, SN 2006gy should have been 1,000 times brighter in 
X-rays than what Chandra detected. 
"This provides strong evidence that SN 2006gy was, in fact, the death of an 
extremely massive star," said Dave Pooley of the University of California at 
Berkeley, who led the Chandra observations. 
The star that produced SN 2006gy apparently expelled a large amount of mass 
prior to exploding. This large mass loss is similar to that seen from Eta 
Carinae, a massive star in our galaxy, raising suspicion that Eta Carinae may 
be poised to explode as a supernova. Although SN 2006gy is intrinsically the 
brightest supernova ever, it is in the galaxy NGC 1260, some 240 million light 
years away. However, Eta Carinae is only about 7,500 light years away in our 
own Milky Way galaxy. 
"We don't know for sure if Eta Carinae will explode soon, but we had better 
keep a close eye on it just in case," said Mario Livio of the Space Telescope 
Science Institute in Baltimore, who was not involved in the research. "Eta 
Carinae's explosion could be the best star-show in the history of modern 
civilization." 
Supernovas usually occur when massive stars exhaust their fuel and collapse 
under their own gravity. In the case of SN 2006gy, astronomers think that a 
very different effect may have triggered the explosion. Under some conditions, 
the core of a massive star produces so much gamma ray radiation that some of 
the energy from the radiation converts into particle and anti-particle pairs. 
The resulting drop in energy causes the star to collapse under its own huge 
gravity. 
After this violent collapse, runaway thermonuclear reactions ensue and the star 
explodes, spewing the remains into space. The SN 2006gy data suggest that 
spectacular supernovas from the first stars - rather than completely collapsing 
to a black hole as theorized - may be more common than previously believed. 
"In terms of the effect on the early universe, there's a huge difference 
between these two possibilities," said Smith. "One pollutes the galaxy with 
large quantities of newly made elements and the other locks them up forever in 
a black hole." 
The results from Smith and his colleagues will appear in The Astrophysical 
Journal. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala., manages the 
Chandra program for the agency's Science Mission Directorate. The Smithsonian 
Astrophysical Observatory controls science and flight operations from the 
Chandra X-ray Center in Cambridge, Mass. Additional information and images are 
available at: 

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