This year is 2847, she is on a planet very close to the Earth. She stood alone at the edge of the pier and saw the sky. Under the moonlight, the pier wood board is a shining silver-blue ribbon that can be returned to the coast. The ocean is black and quietly hits the support of the jetty. On the western horizon beyond the bay there are some bright green stains that shine like the lights of the Galleons team. If it is a word, she is wearing white mechanical butterfly clouds.
NuSTAR can detect titanium released when a supernova is formed. If the first theory is correct, you have to observe the titanium ring when observing the supernova, otherwise you will have to observe the titanium wire. Observation A by Cassiopeia shows that a large number of titanium was discovered in the supernova of the Milky Way occurred 500 years ago. Based on this evidence and a new theoretical model developed by other scientific teams, NuSTAR scientists say that substances in the stars "shake" inside and produce enough energy to prevent and explode stalls I concluded. .COM)
If Musashi's report is announced, researchers will take action. They train telescopes and observations about new supernovae and capture them with X-rays, ultraviolet light, and visible light. Within one day supernovae was confirmed by Hawaii and Chile's telescope observations. Then astronomers had an interest in it. "In principle, the discovery of supernovae is very interesting, I realized that it was discovered by amateur astronomers in Argentina, I would like to know more about how this discovery happened." Bersten Said. De la Plata in Argentina
On 4th July 1054, astronomers on the planet could see the supernova creating the crab nebula (SN 1054) and confirmed the observations recorded by Arab and Chinese astronomers. There is anecdotal evidence that other civilizations have seen the supernova, but no record was found. In the 17th century, the improvement of the telescope led to the observation of the first confirmed nebula. It began in 1610 and the French astronomer Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc for the first time recorded Orion Nebula. In 1618, the Swiss astronomer Johan Baptist Sisat also observed the nebula; by 1659 Christian Huygens did his first detailed study.