ExomatrixTV
6th December 2021, 23:43
Will We See A Supernova Explosion In The Sky in 2022
w4HFRDeONyY
Estimated "once in 10,000 years event" so ... did Atlanteans see something similar too?
Astronomers have predicted that next year a binary star system will come together, merge, and then explode. If and when this happens, it will be a momentous moment when observers are able to watch a stellar merger and explosion for literally the first time in human history. Better yet, you won’t even need some high-tech telescope to watch the explosion go down. Yes, most scientists believe that this explosion will be visible with the naked-eye for most people here on Earth.
Will it have an impact in our "collective psyche"?
cheers,
John
A New Star in the Night Sky in 2022?
https://www.almanac.com/sites/default/files/styles/max_325x325/public/image_nodes/rednova.jpg?itok=pmrArLTl
V838 Monocerotis, one example of a red nova.
This is exciting space news and worth sharing with more sky watch enthusiasts.
In 2022—only a few years from now—an odd type of exploding star called a red nova will appear in our skies in 2022.
This will be the first naked eye nova in decades. And the mechanism behind it is fascinating as well.
This story really begins 10 years ago, when astronomers closely monitored a distant star in Scorpius. This was a double star where the two components were so close together they were actually touching. What was strange is that the orbital period was rapidly decreasing, strongly indicating that the stars might actually merge. Well, it really happened. In 2008, a red nova occurred in that spot, and afterward only one star remained. The two had merged.
Five years earlier, an astronomer predicted that a Red Nova is caused by the merger of stars in a binary system—so the 2008 Scorpius event confirmed that theory.
And now it’s happening again. An astronomy professor at a small U.S. College, along with some of his students, predicted that the double star is just off the right wing tip of Cygnus the swan. From the way the orbit is speeding up from the current 11 hours, that Midwestern astronomer predicts they will merge in the year 2022, give or take half a year. It will be another red nova.
Because this star system is 1800 light years away, which is six times closer than that Scorpius star, the nova should be bright enough to be seen with the naked eye.
Feeling the need to exaggerate, some news stories are saying it will be the brightest star in the sky. Most likely, it will be second magnitude, matching the stars of the Big Dipper. Still, this will be amazing, especially if you know enough backyard astronomy to recognize Cygnus’s shape and be excited by a new star that will extend its right wing.
(Since some news stories are saying it’s the Swan’s left wing, let me mention that yes, if you’re the swan it would be your left wing, but for us down below looking at it, it’s the wing on the right side which is the wing closest to the famous bright summer star Vega.)
We’ll watch that spot every night, especially starting four years from now!
source (https://www.almanac.com/new-star-night-sky-2022)
This Supernova Might Brighten Our Sky In 2022:
ahOqZ3AEw40
A supernova is an amazingly rare occurrence. According to our best calculations, such events occur once every 10,000 years in our galaxy (inside globular clusters). Now, astronomers have discovered a binary star system that is likely to collide and explode, resulting in a stunning supernova in the Earth's sky in 2022. The contact binary is called KIC 9832227 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KIC_9832227).
KIC 9832227 is a contact binary (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_binary) star system in the constellation Cygnus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cygnus_(constellation)), located about 1,940 ±30 light-years (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light-year) away. It is also identified as an eclipsing binary (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eclipsing_binary) with an orbital period (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbital_period) of almost 11 hours. In 2017, the system was predicted to result in a merger (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_collision) in 2022.2 (± 0.6 years), producing a luminous red nova (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminous_red_nova) (LRN) reaching an apparent magnitude (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apparent_magnitude) of 2, or about the brightness of Polaris (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polaris), the North Star. The LRN would remain visible to the naked eye for roughly a month. The merger of the two stellar cores was predicted to give birth to a new, hotter, more massive main-sequence (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_sequence) star. However, a reanalysis of the data in September 2018 revealed that the prediction had been based on a wrongly-timed observation, negating the predicted merger.
The period of the variations in KIC 9832227 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KIC_9832227) has been observed to be growing shorter since 2013, leading to the prediction of the merger in 2022. In September 2018, it was announced that the original prediction was based on a timing offset of 12 hours in one of the datasets. This shows that the period had actually been increasing up to about 2008. The cause for the period variation is still unknown, but it is unlikely that the system will end in a merger at the predicted time.
source (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KIC_9832227)
w4HFRDeONyY
Estimated "once in 10,000 years event" so ... did Atlanteans see something similar too?
Astronomers have predicted that next year a binary star system will come together, merge, and then explode. If and when this happens, it will be a momentous moment when observers are able to watch a stellar merger and explosion for literally the first time in human history. Better yet, you won’t even need some high-tech telescope to watch the explosion go down. Yes, most scientists believe that this explosion will be visible with the naked-eye for most people here on Earth.
Will it have an impact in our "collective psyche"?
cheers,
John
A New Star in the Night Sky in 2022?
https://www.almanac.com/sites/default/files/styles/max_325x325/public/image_nodes/rednova.jpg?itok=pmrArLTl
V838 Monocerotis, one example of a red nova.
This is exciting space news and worth sharing with more sky watch enthusiasts.
In 2022—only a few years from now—an odd type of exploding star called a red nova will appear in our skies in 2022.
This will be the first naked eye nova in decades. And the mechanism behind it is fascinating as well.
This story really begins 10 years ago, when astronomers closely monitored a distant star in Scorpius. This was a double star where the two components were so close together they were actually touching. What was strange is that the orbital period was rapidly decreasing, strongly indicating that the stars might actually merge. Well, it really happened. In 2008, a red nova occurred in that spot, and afterward only one star remained. The two had merged.
Five years earlier, an astronomer predicted that a Red Nova is caused by the merger of stars in a binary system—so the 2008 Scorpius event confirmed that theory.
And now it’s happening again. An astronomy professor at a small U.S. College, along with some of his students, predicted that the double star is just off the right wing tip of Cygnus the swan. From the way the orbit is speeding up from the current 11 hours, that Midwestern astronomer predicts they will merge in the year 2022, give or take half a year. It will be another red nova.
Because this star system is 1800 light years away, which is six times closer than that Scorpius star, the nova should be bright enough to be seen with the naked eye.
Feeling the need to exaggerate, some news stories are saying it will be the brightest star in the sky. Most likely, it will be second magnitude, matching the stars of the Big Dipper. Still, this will be amazing, especially if you know enough backyard astronomy to recognize Cygnus’s shape and be excited by a new star that will extend its right wing.
(Since some news stories are saying it’s the Swan’s left wing, let me mention that yes, if you’re the swan it would be your left wing, but for us down below looking at it, it’s the wing on the right side which is the wing closest to the famous bright summer star Vega.)
We’ll watch that spot every night, especially starting four years from now!
source (https://www.almanac.com/new-star-night-sky-2022)
This Supernova Might Brighten Our Sky In 2022:
ahOqZ3AEw40
A supernova is an amazingly rare occurrence. According to our best calculations, such events occur once every 10,000 years in our galaxy (inside globular clusters). Now, astronomers have discovered a binary star system that is likely to collide and explode, resulting in a stunning supernova in the Earth's sky in 2022. The contact binary is called KIC 9832227 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KIC_9832227).
KIC 9832227 is a contact binary (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_binary) star system in the constellation Cygnus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cygnus_(constellation)), located about 1,940 ±30 light-years (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light-year) away. It is also identified as an eclipsing binary (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eclipsing_binary) with an orbital period (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbital_period) of almost 11 hours. In 2017, the system was predicted to result in a merger (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_collision) in 2022.2 (± 0.6 years), producing a luminous red nova (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminous_red_nova) (LRN) reaching an apparent magnitude (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apparent_magnitude) of 2, or about the brightness of Polaris (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polaris), the North Star. The LRN would remain visible to the naked eye for roughly a month. The merger of the two stellar cores was predicted to give birth to a new, hotter, more massive main-sequence (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_sequence) star. However, a reanalysis of the data in September 2018 revealed that the prediction had been based on a wrongly-timed observation, negating the predicted merger.
The period of the variations in KIC 9832227 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KIC_9832227) has been observed to be growing shorter since 2013, leading to the prediction of the merger in 2022. In September 2018, it was announced that the original prediction was based on a timing offset of 12 hours in one of the datasets. This shows that the period had actually been increasing up to about 2008. The cause for the period variation is still unknown, but it is unlikely that the system will end in a merger at the predicted time.
source (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KIC_9832227)