Copilot
Uw dagelijkse AI-companion
Ongeveer 29.300 resultaten
  1. Uniek: ontploffing van dubbelster binnenkort met blote oog te zien

  2. A Rare Nova Explosion Will Soon Bring a 'New Star' to the Night …

  3. Every 80 years, this star appears in the sky—see the once-in-a …

  4. Mensen vragen ook naar
    T Coronae Borealis’ light is not the result of a single cosmic body exploding but instead a celestial dance between two dying stars orbiting one another. The larger of the two, a red giant star with roughly the mass of our solar system’s sun, is losing its material, including hydrogen and helium.
    This ephemeral lighthouse is T Coronae Borealis, often referred to as T CrB. It is a nova, a nuclear explosion bursting forth from the pallid corpse of a long-dead star. Some people might have seen it before — the same beguiling sight lit up our heavens almost 80 years ago — and future generations may see it in another 80 years.
    “T Coronae Borealis began to dim in March of last year, so some researchers are expecting it to go nova between now and September.” “We’ve been following it worldwide, and it’s been doing some fun things,” Sumner Starrfield, an astrophysicist at Arizona State University, tells National Geographic.
    T Coronae Borealis, or T CrB, last exploded in 1946 and astronomers believe it will do so again between February and September 2024. A red giant star and white dwarf orbit each other in this animation of a nova. The red giant is a large sphere in shades of red, orange, and white, with the side facing the white dwarf the lightest shades.
  5. A rare nova ignites a 'new star' in the sky this year. Here's how to ...

  6. Dubbelster binnenkort voor het eerst in 80 jaar te zien

  7. The Night Sky Will Soon Get ‘a New Star.’ Here’s How to See It.

  8. Tijdelijke ‘nieuwe ster’ verschijnt binnenkort aan de hemel

  9. A new star in the sky might be the 'brightest nova of the generation'

  10. Na 80 jaar is het bijna weer zover: Dubbelster T Coronae Borealis ...

  11. NASA Blogs