Astronomers get picture of aftermath of a star's double detonation for the first time
But a rarer kind of supernova involves a different type of star - a stellar ember called a white dwarf - and a double detonation. Researchers have obtained photographic evidence of this type of supernova for the first time, using the European Southern Observatory's Chile-based Very Large Telescope.
The back-to-back explosions obliterated a white dwarf that had a mass roughly equal to the sun and was located about 160,000 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellation Dorado in a galaxy near the Milky Way called the Large Magellanic Cloud. A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km).
The image shows the scene of the explosion roughly 300 years after it occurred, with two concentric shells of the element calcium moving outward.
This type of explosion, called a Type Ia supernova, would have involved the interaction between a white dwarf and a closely orbiting companion star - either another white dwarf or an unusual star rich in helium - in what is called a binary system.
The primary white dwarf through its gravitational pull would begin to siphon helium from its companion. The helium on the white dwarf's surface at some point would become so hot and dense that it would detonate, producing a shockwave that would compress and ignite the star's underlying core and trigger a second detonation.
First images shared from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory reveal why it will change astronomy forever
'Nothing remains. The white dwarf is completely disrupted,' said Priyam Das, a doctoral student in astrophysics at the University of New South Wales Canberra in Australia, lead author of the study published on Wednesday in the journal Nature Astronomy.
'The time delay between the two detonations is essentially set by the time it takes the helium detonation to travel from one pole of the star all the way around to the other. It's only about two seconds,' said astrophysicist and study co-author Ivo Seitenzahl, a visiting scientist at the Australian National University in Canberra.
In the more common type of supernova, a remnant of the massive exploded star is left behind in the form of a dense neutron star or a black hole.
The researchers used the Very Large Telescope's Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer, or MUSE, instrument to map the distribution of different chemical elements in the supernova aftermath. Calcium is seen in blue in the image - an outer ring caused by the first detonation and an inner ring by the second.
These two calcium shells represent 'the perfect smoking-gun evidence of the double-detonation mechanism,' Das said.
'We can call this forensic astronomy - my made-up term - since we are studying the dead remains of stars to understand what caused the death,' Das said.
Can science solve the puzzle of consciousness?
Stars with up to eight times the mass of our sun appear destined to become a white dwarf. They eventually burn up all the hydrogen they use as fuel. Gravity then causes them to collapse and blow off their outer layers in a 'red giant' stage, eventually leaving behind a compact core - the white dwarf. The vast majority of these do not explode as supernovas.
While scientists knew of the existence of Type Ia supernovas, there had been no clear visual evidence of such a double detonation until now. Type Ia supernovas are important in terms of celestial chemistry in that they forge heavier elements such as calcium, sulfur and iron.
'This is essential for understanding galactic chemical evolution including the building blocks of planets and life,' Das said.
A shell of sulfur also was seen in the new observations of the supernova aftermath.
Iron is a crucial part of Earth's planetary composition and, of course, a component of human red blood cells.
In addition to its scientific importance, the image offers aesthetic value.
'It's beautiful,' Seitenzahl said. 'We are seeing the birth process of elements in the death of a star. The Big Bang only made hydrogen and helium and lithium. Here we see how calcium, sulfur or iron are made and dispersed back into the host galaxy, a cosmic cycle of matter.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
7 days ago
- CTV News
NS professor discusses latest space developments
Atlantic Watch Saint Mary's University professor Rob Thacker speaks with Todd Battis about the latest developments in space exploration.


CTV News
27-07-2025
- CTV News
SuperNOVA summer camp: High school students get hands-on experience solving climate problems
High school students in Dalhousie University's SuperNOVA Ocean Climate Innovation Program put their remotely operated vehicles to the test in the Halifax Harbour. Jarman Ley, the program coordinator of SuperNOVA, said 25 students took part in the program focused on ocean technologies, engineering, and artificial intelligence. 'We started this program to get high school students excited and interested in the climate and how the ocean relates to that,' said Ley. 'They all developed programs for their own sensors and then drove them into the harbour to see the difference between historical harbour data and current harbour data.' SuperNOVA Students participating in Dalhousie University's SuperNOVA Ocean Climate Innovation Program put their remotely operated vehicles into the Halifax Harbour Friday, July 25, 2025. (Paul DeWitt/CTV Atlantic) The students are testing for oxygen, solidity, and the acidity of the water, said Ley. 'They are specifically doing dissolved oxygen to see if fish have enough oxygen to breathe. They are doing the solidity because as climate changes or temperature changes you can have saltier waters, which is inhospitable to plants. They are doing the acidity of the water, the oxygen reduction potential, which is essentially how the ocean cleans itself.' Ley said the program teaches skills the students can take into their university careers. 'It's been a really interesting way to take all of the knowledge that we've learned and wrap it into one project that we can test and see the results of,' said student Finnegan Jafmann. SuperNOVA Students participating in Dalhousie University's SuperNOVA Ocean Climate Innovation Program put their remotely operated vehicles into the Halifax Harbour Friday, July 25, 2025. (Paul DeWitt/CTV Atlantic) 'A lot of the people here are probably going to use this as really good experience because we got to go to a lot of places. We got to tour multiple parts of the Dal building and the engineering section, and we got to talk to a lot of people about their projects,' said student Emily Whidden. 'For me, it was a lot of interesting information, but for the people who are planning to go into these fields or even come to Dal, it was probably a really good foot in the door.' From 2023 to date, Dalhousie University said SuperNOVA has reached more than 27,500 youth through this not-for-profit initiative. 'Young people are the lifeblood of the future. So, we really believe if we start to encourage them now, that they'll be that much more advanced when they get to university and potentially study it and develop the next generation of innovation,' said Ley. According to Dalhousie University, SuperNOVA summer camps introduce participants to STEM concepts, careers and mentors through 'fun experiments and innovative hands-on activities.' For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page


CTV News
25-07-2025
- CTV News
Students participate in SuperNOVA
Atlantic Watch Students at Dalhousie's SuperNOVA summer program put their remotely operated vehicles to the test.