
SN 1054 - Wikipedia
SN 1054 is one of eight supernovae in the Milky Way that can be identified because written testimony describing the explosion has survived. In the nineteenth century, astronomers began to take an interest in the historic records.
Mystery explosion 1,000 years ago may be a rare, third type of ...
Jun 29, 2021 · On July 4, 1054 — about 700 years before the United States popped its first celebratory firework — a mysterious light exploded in the sky. The blast was visible around the world, lingering...
First Observed Nearly a Thousand Years Ago, Scientists Finally Confirm ...
Jul 1, 2021 · In the summer of 1054, Chinese astronomers recorded a star that radiated so brightly it was visible in daylight and shined for 23 days. The explosion, now known as SN 1054, was a supernova, and its...
Crab Nebula - Wikipedia
The earliest recorded documentation of observation of astronomical object SN 1054 was as it was occurring in 1054, by Chinese astrononomers and Japanese observers, hence its numerical identification.
Crab Nebula exploded in 1054 | Astronomy.com
Jun 8, 2007 · A team of astronomers has recalculated the explosion date of the famous Crab Nebula supernova and found excellent agreement between their measurements and the classic date of the 1054 a.d....
Stellar explosion in 1054 C.E. may have been a third flavor of ...
Jun 28, 2021 · Astronomers have found convincing evidence that supernovae come in a third flavor, powered by a long-suspected explosive mechanism that may explain a bright supernova humans observed 1,000 ago and that birthed the beautiful Crab Nebula.
Was SN 1054 a Type II Supernova? - Springer
Was SN 1054 a Type II Supernova? Part of the book series: Astrophysics and Space Science Library ( (ASSL,volume 66)) The Crab Nebula is the most studied of all supernova remnants, yet it has not been possible to reconcile its properties with either of …
His propositional calendar was Japanese observations end of June 1054, in the pre-maximum phase (like Jupiter and closer to the Sun in the eastern horizon, at dawn), and Chinese at the maximum (July 4th 1054), until April 17, 1056, 21 months later, when it …
SN 1054: A pulsar-powered supernova? - NASA/ADS
The famous ancient supernova SN 1054 could have been too bright to be explained in the “standard” radioactive-powered supernova scenario. As an alternative attempt, we demonstrate that the spin-down of the newly born Crab pulsar could provide a sufficient energy supply to make SN 1054 visible at daytime for 23 days and at night for 653 days ...
Our results indicate that SN 1054 could be a “normal” cousin of magnetar-powered superlumi-nous supernovae. Therefore, SN 1054-like supernovae could be a probe to uncover the properties of newly born neutron stars, which provide initial conditions for studies on neutron star evolutions.
- Some results have been removed