Astronomers have discovered that the birth of neutron stars with magnetic fields trillions of times stronger than Earth's magnetosphere is the "magic trick" behind superbright supernovas.
The light did not fade the way it was supposed to. After blazing into view about a billion light-years from Earth, the ...
Betelgeuse, the red supergiant anchoring Orion’s left shoulder, will one day run out of fuel and collapse into a supernova ...
The discovery of a newborn magnetar inside a distant supernova helps explain why some stellar explosions shine far brighter ...
Researchers found a magnetic star core acting as a high speed engine to power a record breaking luminous supernova.
Researchers say the "powerful engine" behind superluminous exploding stars had been hidden for years — until a "chirp" from the cosmos helped confirm their link.
Superluminous supernovas are the brightest stellar explosions in the universe. Astronomers may have found a mechanism that can trigger these events.
An artist's impression of a magnetar with a wobbly accretion disk. (Joseph Farah and Curtis McCully) A never-before-seen 'chirp' in the light of an exploding star has revealed new clues about the ...
The findings confirm a theory first proposed 16 years ago by University of California, Berkeley theoretical astrophysicist ...
Imagine looking up at the night sky and seeing a star suddenly burst into a blaze of light brighter than anything nearby. A flash so bright that it briefly outshines an entire galaxy before fading ...
A rare gravitationally lensed supernova called SN 2025wny appears in five separate images due to the gravity of two ...