ASTRONEWS
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Sept. 18, 2015 May 16, 2016 Oct. 3, 2016 Oct. 6, 2017
WWW.ASTRONOMY.COM 15
Neptune’s dark storm weakens further
QUICK TAKES
LOOKING FOR LIFE
NASA’s planetary protection
officer suggested aggressively
exploring Mars’ most promising
regions for signs of life.
- SCIENTIFIC HANDOFF
A consortium headed by the
University of Central Florida
will now manage Arecibo
Observatory in Puerto Rico.
POSITIVE OUTLOOK
New research suggests
humans would react positively
to the discovery of microbial
life on another world.
NEW APPOINTMENT
President Donald Trump
recently nominated former
astronaut James Reilly to lead
the U.S. Geological Survey.
THE FLOOR IS LAVA
The Chicxulub meteor that
struck Earth 66 million years
ago triggered the release of
magma from seafloor ridges
all over the world.
WORKING TOGETHER
The Very Large Telescope’s
ESPRESSO spectrograph has
combined light from all four
8.2-meter Unit Telescopes
for the first time.
BRIGHT BEACONS
Computer simulations show
the oldest stars in the Milky
Way can act as tracers for
invisible dark matter.
IGNORANCE IS BLISS
Contrary to current theory,
star-forming gas in the galaxy
WISE 1029 is not affected by
strong outflows from its
supermassive black hole.
DEEP FREEZE
Asteroids can function as
“time capsules” that preserve
molecules from the early solar
system and help scientists
reconstruct the origins of
life on Earth.
BY THE STARS
Swedish researchers have
shown that nocturnal animals
can use light from stars and
the glow of the Milky Way to
navigate at night.
PULSING LIGHTS
Scientists have proven that
pulsating aurorae occur when
waves of plasma flow from the
magnetosphere down into
Earth’s atmosphere. — J.P.
Catching a glimpse of a supernova is tricky business.
Not only do you need the right equipment, but you
also need to have some incredible luck. Fortunately
for amateur astronomer Víctor Buso, September 20,
2016, was apparently his lucky day.
Buso was testing a new camera mounted on a
16-inch telescope at his home rooftop observatory in
Rosario, Argentina. Under a dark sky, he pointed his
scope at NGC 613 — a spiral galaxy about 70 million
light-years away in the constellation Sculptor — to
take a series of short-exposure photographs.
To ensure his new camera was functioning prop-
erly, Buso examined the images right away. He
noticed that a previously invisible point of light had
appeared on the outskirts of NGC 613, and that the
point was quickly growing brighter as he moved
from one image to the next.
With the help of fellow amateur Sebastian Otero,
Buso prepared an international alert, an online noti-
fication reporting transient night-sky events. Within
no time, astronomer Melina Bersten and her col-
leagues at the Instituto de Astrofísica de La Plata
spotted the report and immediately realized that
Buso had caught the initial burst of light from a
massive supernova explosion — an extremely
rare event. According to Bersten, the chances of
making such a discovery are between 1 in 10 million
and 1 in 100 million.
“Professional astronomers have long been
searching for such an event,” said University of
California, Berkeley astronomer Alex Filippenko,
whose follow-up observations were critical to ana-
lyzing the explosion, in a press release.
“Observations of stars in the first moments they
begin exploding provide information that cannot
be directly obtained in any other way,” Filippenko
added. “It’s like winning the cosmic lottery.”
— Jake Parks
Supernova snapshot
is 1 in 10 million
39,
The distance from Earth, in miles, at which asteroid
2018 CB passed on February 9. This is less than
a fifth of the Earth-Moon separation.
COSMIC EXPANSION. Astronomers used Hubble to take the most precise measurement yet of the universe’s
expansion rate, and confirmed it is expanding faster than expected.
SMELLY STORM. Dark storms on Neptune were first spotted by Voyager 2 in 1989. Using the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers
have continued to track similar features. A recent massive storm, found by Hubble in 2015 and believed to consist of unpleasant-smelling
hydrogen sulfide, is slowly fading away. Once roughly 3,100 miles (5,000 kilometers) across, the storm now measures only 2,300 miles
(3,700 km) in diameter. Researchers had believed that an eruption of cloud activity would occur as the vortex approached Neptune’s
equator, but instead, it’s shrinking calmly before our eyes. — Amber Jorgenson
NASA, ESA, AND M.H.
WONG AND
A.I.
HSU (UC BERKELEY)
LUCKY SHOT.
Supernova 2016gkg
(indicated with red
lines) occurred in the
spiral galaxy NGC 613,
about 70 million light-
years from Earth.
On September 20, 2016,
amateur astronomer
Víctor Buso captured the
initial burst of light from
this supernova, a first.
CARNEGIE INSTITUTION FOR SCIENCE,
LAS CAMPANAS OBSERVATORY
DRAMATIC ENTRANCE.
This sequence of images (top to
bottom) taken by Buso shows
the sudden appearance and
brightening of the supernova
over the course of 13 minutes.
V. BUSO, M. BERSTEN, ET AL.