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Blast From the Past

Spaceexplod
The region of Aries before (left) and after (right)
the explosion, with the pinpoint of light created
clearly visible. Courtesy NASA.

Scientists are in the midst of observing a supernova that's  in the act of exploding. GRB060218 is cooking right now in the constellation Aries. It’s quite exciting, but it helps underscore what is to me one of the eeriest aspects of astronomy: the fact that it's essentially looking back in time. GRB060218 is 440 million light-years away. That means this explosion actually happened 440 million years ago and is only now getting to us. This thing started waaay before the Internet. It even preceded the dinosaurs. Back then, all the continents were still shoved together in a giant Pangaea.  Makes you wonder what other amazing—or horrible—things are racing toward us at light speed right now. If, for example, our sun went prematurely bust, we wouldn’t know it for a full seven minutes! —Eric Adams

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» A Death in the Heavens from The Cool Scrolls
On February 18 this year, an orbiting U.S. sentinel, the telescope Swift, picked up a gamma ray burst (GRB… hmm now the name makes sense!) in a star-forming galaxy about 440 million light years away, towards the constellation of Aries. The astronomer... [Read More]

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