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    Home»Space»Scientists Think This Star Could Be the Next Supernova
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    Scientists Think This Star Could Be the Next Supernova

    By Chalmers University of TechnologyAugust 25, 20254 Comments6 Mins Read
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    Red Supergiant DFK 52
    Red supergiant DFK 52 and its surroundings as seen by ALMA. The vast, complex bubble blown by this extreme star is about 1.4 light-years across, thousands of times wider than our Solar System. ALMA measures light invisible to the human eye, with a wavelength of around 1.3 millimeters, emitted by molecules of carbon monoxide and silicon monoxide. Thanks to the Doppler effect, the team has measured how fast the gas is moving along our sightline towards the star. In this image, parts of the bubble moving away from us relative to the star are shown in red, and material moving towards us in blue. Credit: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)/M. Siebert et al.

    A red supergiant star has blown an enormous bubble of gas and dust, baffling astronomers.

    The structure, as massive as the Sun and larger than our solar system, formed in a sudden eruption thousands of years ago. Why the star didn’t explode as a supernova remains a mystery.

    Discovery of a Vast Stellar Bubble

    Astronomers at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden have identified a gigantic, expanding bubble of gas and dust surrounding a red supergiant star. It is the largest structure of this kind ever observed in the Milky Way. Containing as much mass as the Sun, the bubble was expelled in a violent stellar eruption about 4000 years ago. Scientists are still puzzled as to how the star managed to survive such a dramatic event.

    The findings, published in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics, come from a team led by Mark Siebert of Chalmers. Using the ALMA radio telescope in Chile, the researchers studied the red supergiant known as DFK 52, a star similar in many ways to the famous Betelgeuse.

    Red Supergiant Star DFK 52
    Red supergiant star DFK 52 is a member of the star cluster Stephenson 2. In this image, the brightest stars are all supergiants and all members of the cluster. This image is made from data taken with the Spitzer Space Telescope in light much redder than our eyes can see (wavelengths 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8 micrometers). Despite its remarkable bubble, too small to see in this image, DFK 52 is not unusually bright. The bright star in the lower left is another red supergiant, known as DFK 1 or Stephenson 2-18. It may be one of the largest stars known. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/IPAC

    A Giant, Expanding Cloud of Gas and Dust

    “We got a big surprise when we saw what ALMA was showing us. The star is more or less a twin of Betelgeuse, but it’s surrounded by a vast, messy bubble of material,” says Mark Siebert at Chalmers.

    This immense cloud, made of gas and dust, holds as much mass as the Sun and stretches 1.4 light years from the star. To put that in perspective, the bubble is thousands of times wider than our entire solar system.

    If DFK 52 were as close to Earth as Betelgeuse, the bubble would appear to cover about one third of the full Moon’s width in the night sky.

    Mark Siebert
    Mark Siebert, astronomer, Department of Space, Earth and Environment, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden. Credit: Chalmers University of Technology | Christian Löwhagen

    By tracking the movement of molecules in the gas with ALMA’s radio observations, astronomers determined that the bubble is still expanding. They believe it originated when the star violently ejected part of its outer layers during an explosive outburst a few thousand years ago.

    “The bubble is made of material that used to be part of the star. It must have been ejected in a dramatic event, an explosion, that happened about four thousand years ago. In cosmic terms, that’s just a moment ago,” says Elvire De Beck, astronomer at Chalmers.

    The Galaxy’s Next Supernova?

    Why DFK 52 shed so much mass without exploding as a supernova is still unclear. One possibility is that the star has a hidden companion that helped it cast off its outer layers.

    “To us, it’s a mystery as to how the star managed to expel so much material in such a short timeframe. Maybe, like Betelgeuse seems to, it has a companion star that’s still to be discovered,” says Mark Siebert.

    Elvire De Beck
    Elvire De Beck, astronomer, Department of Space, Earth and Environment, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden. Credit: Chalmers University of Technology | Christian Löwhagen

    Red supergiants like DFK 52 are nearing the ends of their lives and are expected to eventually explode as supernovae. Could this star be next?

    “We’re planning more observations to understand what’s happening – and to find out whether this might be the Milky Way’s next supernova. If this is a typical red supergiant, it could explode sometime in the next million years,” says Elvire De Beck.

    Reference: “Stephenson 2 DFK 52: Discovery of an exotic red supergiant in the massive stellar cluster RSGC2” by M. A. Siebert, E. De Beck, G. Quintana-Lacaci and W. H. T. Vlemmings, 6 August 2025, Astronomy & Astrophysics.
    DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202555975

    The study was carried out by Mark Siebert, Elvire De Beck, and Wouter Vlemmings from Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden, together with Guillermo Quintana Lacaci from the Instituto de Fisica Fundamental in Spain.

    Red supergiants are among the brightest and rarest stars visible in the universe. They represent the final stage in the lives of stars that began with far greater mass than our Sun (more than eight times its mass). For astronomers, these stars are crucial for piecing together the life cycles of stars and planets. The most massive ones produce and release newly created elements into interstellar space, stirring up gas and dust and fueling the formation of future generations of stars.

    Within our own galaxy, the Milky Way, some red supergiants are visible without a telescope to anyone under a dark sky. Two of the best-known examples are Betelgeuse in the constellation Orion and Antares in Scorpius.

    ALMA Antennas Pointing to the Milky Way on Atacama Desert
    ALMA antennas pointing to the Milky Way in the Atacama Desert. Credit: NSF/ AUI/ NSF NRAO/ B.Foott

    The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is a world-class observatory located in Chile. It is operated as a collaboration between ESO, the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), and Japan’s National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS), working together with the Republic of Chile.

    In Sweden, Onsala Space Observatory at Chalmers University of Technology has played a role in ALMA from the very beginning. Among its contributions are specialized receivers built for the telescope. Onsala also hosts the Nordic ALMA Regional Centre, which offers technical expertise for the project and helps astronomers across the Nordic countries make full use of ALMA’s capabilities.

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    ALMA Astronomy Astrophysics Chalmers University of Technology Stars Supernova
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    4 Comments

    1. Boba on August 26, 2025 3:03 am

      They “think’? So, again, they don’t know. What good are those “scientists” then?

      Science is supposed to give one the ability to predict things. So all of this advanced astrophysics is really no better than the tarot reading.

      Reply
    2. JunggooLee on August 26, 2025 11:01 am

      https://scitechdaily.com/scientists-think-this-star-could-be-the-next-supernova/

      1.
      Scientists think that the star could be the next supernova.

      Courtesy Chalmers University of Technology 25 August 2025

      _The red supergiant DFK 52 and its surroundings observed by ALMA. The diameter of this massive, complex bubble emitted by this extreme star is approximately 1.4 light-years, thousands of times wider than our solar system.

      _ALMA measures light that is invisible to the eye at a wavelength of about 1.3 mm emitted from carbon monoxide and silicon monoxide molecules.

      _Using the Doppler effect, the research team measured how fast the gas moved toward the star along our gaze.

      _In this image, some of the foam moving away from us by the star is shown in red, and the material approaching us is shown in blue. Source: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)/M. Siebert et al

      ^!!^>>>>>
      > When the size a of the red a star dies due to qpeoms.bending decomposition, the surface temperature decreases to red and becomes dust, which increases in volume and moves away.

      When the epidermis of star a is completely decomposed, the side size is now -1 down.banc, becoming a blue b star, and approaching our gaze. Uh-huh.

      back<<<<>>>>>>
      The way msbase.galaxy loses its mass is the banc.qpeoms, which has already been defined (*). However, it produces voids and bubbles by horizontally reducing the mass while keeping the size as it is.

      > Then what happens to msbase.size when mass loss is over? Does everyone only have the same size of qpeoms dust?

      > That’s not the case. If an atom loses all its electrons in its electronic angular size, the atomic number goes down,

      > View 1. If you lose all mass.nk to this banc.qpeoms *it will probably be a size down view 2. depending on the temperature change.

      View 1. From blue to red nkmass.xbancing
      Create qpeoms bubbles

      0320072411
      1608251204
      0921130517
      2214011810
      1502190623

      |size.down.ybanc|

      View 2. From Blue to Red
      nkmass.xbancing
      04110613
      14051203
      15080902
      01100716

      View 2-1.09banc
      041106b4-b.vix.a4
      b5051203
      15080b02
      01b10816

      Reply
    3. Юрис on August 26, 2025 11:02 pm

      при сбросе внешней оболочки в момент перехода к ядерному синтезу более тяжелых элементов из атмосферы звезды происходит скачок температуры, и сброшенная оболочка содержащая сложные частицы подхватив образование атомов углерода и кремния разгоняясь остывает, увлекая и другие атомы и разгружая звезду, от внешнего давления, и звезда начинает новую жизнь. Ваша версия о процессе перехода красного гиганта к синтезу более тяжелых элементов и его последствиях звучит интересно и имеет научную основу. Давайте разберем основные моменты:

      1. **Скинутая оболочка**: Когда красный гигант сбрасывает оболочку, это действительно связано с переходом к синтезу более тяжелых элементов. В процессе термоядерного синтеза в ядре звезды образуются такие элементы, как углерод и кремний. При этом внешние слои звезды могут быть сброшены, что приводит к образованию планетарной туманности.

      2. **Расширение и охлаждение**: При расширении сброшенная оболочка действительно охлаждается, и в ней могут образовываться молекулы, такие как монооксид углерода и монооксид кремния. Это подтверждается наблюдениями телескопа ALMA, который фиксирует излучение этих молекул.

      3. **Влияние на звезду**: После сброса оболочки звезда может перейти в стадию белого карлика, если ее масса недостаточна для дальнейшего синтеза. Однако в случае более массивных звезд, как в вашем примере, возможен коллапс ядра и взрыв сверхновой.

      4. **Различие в сценариях**: Вы правильно отметили, что звезды с более высокой температурой и легкими газами в атмосфере могут испытывать коллапс из-за обратного удара взрывной волны. Это связано с тем, что такие звезды имеют более сложное строение и большую массу, что приводит к более драматичным последствиям.

      5. **Научная перспектива**: Ваша версия о «второй жизни» звезды после сброса оболочки интересна, но в классической астрофизике это не рассматривается как отдельный этап эволюции. Обычно такие звезды завершают свою жизнь взрывом сверхновой или переходят в стадию белого карлика.

      Если у вас есть дополнительные вопросы или вы хотите углубиться в детали, я с радостью помогу!

      Reply
    4. Zradan on August 27, 2025 8:44 am

      When “the next supernova explodes”, will Earth be affected, if Earth is still around?

      Reply
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply


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