PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Radio signal reveals supernova origin

Radio signal reveals supernova origin
2023-05-17
(Press-News.org) In the latest issue of the journal Nature, astronomers from Stockholm University reveal the origin of a thermonuclear supernova explosion. Strong emission lines of helium and the first detection of such a supernova in radio waves show that the exploding white dwarf star had a helium-rich companion.

Supernovae of Type Ia are important for astronomers since they are used to measure the expansion of the Universe. However, the origin of these explosions has remained an open question. While it is established that the explosion is that of a compact white dwarf star somehow accreting too much matter from a companion star, the exact process and the nature of the progenitor is not known. The new discovery of supernova SN 2020eyj established that the companion star was a helium star that had lost much of its material just prior to the explosion of the white dwarf.

“Once we saw the signatures of strong interaction with the material from the companion we tried to also detect it in radio emission”, explains Erik Kool, post-doc at the Department of Astronomy at Stockholm university and lead author of the paper. “The detection in radio is the first one of a Type Ia supernova – something astronomers have tried to do for decades.”

Supernova 2020eyj was discovered by the Zwicky Transient Facility camera on Palomar mountain, where the Oskar Klein Centre at Stockholm University are members.

“The Nordic Optical telescope on La Palma was fundamental for following up this supernova”, says Professor Jesper Sollerman at the Department of Astronomy and co-author of the paper.
“As were spectra from the large Keck telescope on Hawai’i that immediately revealed the very unusual helium-dominated material around the exploded star.”

“This is clearly a very unusual Type Ia supernova, but still related to the ones we use to measure the expansion of the universe”, adds Joel Johansson from the Department of Physics.

“While normal Type Ia supernovae appear to always explode with the same brightness, this supernova tells us that there are many different pathways to a white dwarf star explosion”, he adds.

Link to the article in Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-05916-w 

The paper A radio-detected Type Ia supernova with helium-rich circumstellar material is published in Nature and is led by Erik Kool from the Department of Astronomy at Stockholm University and describes the first radio detection of a Type Ia supernova. Co-authors from Stockholm University are Joel Johansson, Jesper Sollerman, Steve Schulze, Peter Lundqvist, Sheng Yang, and Conor Omand. This work involved researchers from institutes across the world, including Caltech, Weizmann Institute, IAA-CSIC, NAOJ, Macquarie University, and Trinity College Dublin.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Radio signal reveals supernova origin Radio signal reveals supernova origin 2 Radio signal reveals supernova origin 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Are Earth and Venus the only volcanic planets? Not anymore.

Are Earth and Venus the only volcanic planets? Not anymore.
2023-05-17
Imagine an Earth-sized planet that’s not at all Earth-like. Half this world is locked in permanent daytime, the other half in permanent night, and it’s carpeted with active volcanoes. Astronomers have discovered that planet. The planet, named LP 791-18d, orbits a small red dwarf star about 90 light years away. Volcanic activity makes the discovery particularly notable for astronomers because volcanism facilitates interaction between a world’s interior and its exterior. “Why is volcanism important? It is the major source contributing to a planetary atmosphere, and with an atmosphere you could have surface liquid water — a requirement for sustaining ...

A channel involved in pain sensation can also suppress it

A channel involved in pain sensation can also suppress it
2023-05-17
Pain is good. It’s the body’s way to keep an animal from harming itself or repeating a dangerous mistake. But sometimes the debilitating sensation can get in the way. So evolution has devised ways to tamp that response down under certain circumstances. Researchers at UC Santa Barbara identified the pathway in fruit flies that reduces the sensation of pain from heat. Remarkably, just a single neuron on each side of the animal’s brain controls the response. What’s more, the molecule responsible for suppressing ...

Genetic research offers new perspective on the early evolution of animals

2023-05-17
A study published by MBARI researchers and their collaborators today in Nature provides new insights about one of the earliest points in animal evolution that happened more than 700 million years ago. For more than a century, scientists have been working to understand the pivotal moment when an ancient organism gave rise to the diverse array of animals in the world today. As technology and science have advanced, scientists have investigated two alternative hypotheses for which animals—sponges or comb jellies, also known as ctenophores—were most distantly related to all other animals. Identifying this outlier—known as the sibling ...

Research spotlight: a conversational artificial intelligence program can generate credible medical information in response to common patient questions

2023-05-17
What was the question you set out to answer with this study? ChatGPT, a new language processing tool driven by artificial intelligence (AI), provides conversational text responses to questions and can generate valuable information for enquiring individuals, but the quality of ChatGPT-generated answers to medical questions is currently unclear. What Methods or Approach Did You Use? We retrieved eight common questions and answers about colonoscopy from the publicly available webpages of three randomly-selected hospitals from the top-20 list of the US News & World Report Best Hospitals for Gastroenterology and Gastrointestinal Surgery. We ...

How breast cancer arises

2023-05-17
In what may turn out to be a long-missing piece in the puzzle of breast cancer, Harvard Medical School researchers have identified the molecular sparkplug that ignites cases of the disease currently unexplained by the classical model of breast-cancer development.  A report on the team’s work is published May 17 in Nature.  “We have identified what we believe is the original molecular trigger that initiates a cascade culminating in breast tumor development in a subset of breast cancers that are driven by estrogen,” said study senior investigator Peter Park, professor of ...

Astronomers find potentially volcano-covered Earth-size world

Astronomers find potentially volcano-covered Earth-size world
2023-05-17
Cambridge, Mass. – Astronomers have discovered an Earth-size exoplanet, a world beyond the solar system, that may be carpeted with volcanoes and could potentially support life. Called LP 791-18 d, the planet could undergo volcanic outbursts as often as Jupiter’s moon Io, the most volcanically active body in the solar system. The planet was first reported in Nature and the discovery was made possible in part due to ground-based observations made by the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian. LP 791-18 d orbits a small red dwarf star about 90 light-years away in a southern constellation called Crater. The ...

Vigorous exercise not tied to increased risk of adverse events in rare heart condition

2023-05-17
Vigorous exercise does not appear to increase the risk of death or life-threatening arrhythmia for people with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), according to a study supported by the National Institutes of Health. HCM is a rare, inherited disorder that causes the heart muscle to become thick and enlarged and affects 1 in 500 people worldwide. It has been associated with sudden cardiac death in young athletes and other young people. However, the study, published in JAMA Cardiology, found that people with the disease who exercise vigorously are no more likely to die or experience severe cardiac events than those who exercised moderately ...

Climate change made record Asia humid heatwave at least 30 times more likely: attribution study

2023-05-17
Human-caused climate change made April’s record-breaking humid heatwave in Bangladesh, India, Laos and Thailand at least 30 times more likely, according to rapid attribution analysis by an international team of leading climate scientists as part of the World Weather Attribution group. The study also concludes that the high vulnerability in the region, which is one of the world’s heatwave hotpots, amplified the impacts. In April, parts of south and southeast Asia experienced an intense heatwave, with record-breaking temperatures that passed 42ºC in Laos and 45°C in Thailand. The heat ...

Study finds link between deprived areas and number of children in care proceedings in England

2023-05-17
A strong link between the extent of deprivation of local authorities in England and their numbers of children going into the care system through the family courts has been uncovered by researchers at Lancaster University. The study, available online and due to be published in July 2023 in the journal Children & Society, found that for every one unit increase in the standardized Office for National Statistics’ (ONS) English index of multiple area deprivation, the number of children in care proceedings in English family courts increased by around 70%. The research team analysed data from the English Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service ...

Call for papers: JMIR Dermatology special theme issue on teledermatology

Call for papers: JMIR Dermatology special theme issue on teledermatology
2023-05-17
JMIR Dermatology—the official journal of the International Society of Teledermatology (ISTD)—and the journal’s guest editors welcome submissions to a special theme issue to coincide with the 10th ISTD World Congress held at the 23rd World Congress of Dermatology on July 4 to 7, 2023, in Singapore. This theme issue will allow attendees of the ISTD World Congress to share their work with a wider audience by disseminating their work in a well-respected, peer-reviewed, open-access journal.  Teledermatology has been increasingly gaining recognition as a means of delivering dermatological ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pitchers rejoice? Plasma irradiation might prevent tendon re-tears

The clinical significance of microvascular inflammation after kidney transplantation

The Lancet Public Health: New Commission calls for regulatory reform to tackle the health impacts of the rapid global expansion of commercial gambling

Scientists create cancer patients’ ‘digital twins’ to predict how well treatments may work

New ‘mini-protein’ carries radiation dose directly to tumours without harming healthy tissues

Patients with advanced bladder cancer with alterations in the FGFR3 gene respond well to investigational drug, TYRA-300

Researchers find key genetic mutations in bowel cancer cells that lead to resistance to WRN inhibitors

Millions in the U.S. may rely on groundwater contaminated with PFAS for drinking water supplies

Human actions cause insect color change

New AI model could make power grids more reliable amid rising renewable energy use

Lurie Children’s helps train pediatricians to screen toddlers for mental health risk, with equity and ethics in mind

UTEP researchers develop low-cost device that detects cancer in an hour

Texas A&M physicist Kevin Kelly earns American Physical Society Early Career Award

University of Maryland researcher awarded $1.8 million to study climate change’s impact on people with kidney disease

Johns Hopkins Children’s Center research in mice suggests zinc supplements have potential value to directly treat short bowel syndrome

Kalinin receives David Adler Lectureship Award

Evaluating the link between chemicals and declining insect populations

Scientists discover molecules that store much of the carbon in space

Sublethal agrochemical exposure disrupts insect behavior and long-term survivability

Understanding that US wildfires are becoming faster-moving is key to preparedness

Model predicts PFAS occurrence in groundwater in the US

By studying new species of tardigrade, researchers glean insights into radiation tolerance

Plastic chemical causes causes DNA breakage and chromosome defects in sex cells

Vitamin K supplement slows prostate cancer in mice

Wildfires are becoming faster and more dangerous in the Western U.S.

Gut bacteria transfer genes to disable weapons of their competitors

A new hydrogel semiconductor represents a breakthrough for tissue-interfaced bioelectronics

Bird study finds sons help their parents less than daughters because they’re scouting future prospects

Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM) awarded up to $48 million to utilize body-on-a-chip technologies to study fibrosis-inducing chemical injuries

Study offers ‘compelling evidence’ for continuous stroke care improvement

[Press-News.org] Radio signal reveals supernova origin