The sudden appearance of the transient "mystery object" SCP 06F6 in Hubble's field of view. The lower image quadrant represents a zoomed in view.
A team of astronomers at the University of Warwick think they’ve finally explained what caused the bizarre transient object SCP 06F6. By comparing the optical spectrum of SCP 06F6 to that of carbon-rich stars in our own galaxy, the team concludes the sudden outburst was not a low-energy local event but a supernova-like explosion within a cool carbon-rich atmosphere some 2 billion light years away. If they’re right, it means the collapse of carbon-rich stars may lead to supernovae unlike any yet seen.
A team of astronomers at the University of Warwick think they’ve finally explained what caused the bizarre transient object SCP 06F6. By comparing the optical spectrum of SCP 06F6 to that of carbon-rich stars in our own galaxy, the team concludes the sudden outburst was not a low-energy local event but a supernova-like explosion within a cool carbon-rich atmosphere some 2 billion light years away. If they’re right, it means the collapse of carbon-rich stars may lead to supernovae unlike any yet seen.
Full artice by Brian Ventrudo on Universe Today
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