A forensic analysis of the element concentration found in the Hypatia stone finds evidence in the cometary fragment, which may have impacted Earth 28 million years ago, of a supernova origin story
Dec 14th: It’s A Weird Place, But We’re Getting To Know It!
Today @CheapAstro is about time and timing. What is time made of? Is Betelguese about to blow? Find the answers at #365DaysOfAstro
Oct 1st: Awesome Astronomy October 2021 News
It’s time for October skyguide and news round-up session with @AwesomeAstroPod. Today we have mysterious case of missing supernova, volcanoes on Venus,and
Aug 16th: Famous Stars
This week we’re going to talk about famous stars. We’re talking about those hot balls of plasma across the distant Universe. #365DyasOfAstro
Aug 14th: The Shortest Long Gamma Ray Burst
Extensive studies of a recent GRB show the dividing line between short and long is not clear as this “long” GRB was exceptionally short!
Jun 2nd: Awesome Astronomy June 2021 News Round-up
Time to check the skyguide and prepare your instrument for night sky observation. @AwesomeAstroPod also discuss about buying & selling astro kit & more news round-up
May 14th: Exploring Mars With Professional Martian Dr. Tanya Harrison
This week, @WSHCrew will explore Mars with Professional Martian Dr. Tanya Harrison and news update. This week will cover Ingenuity, a bottle of wine aged in space, a strange supernova and also about Tianwen-1 Rover.
Apr 2nd: News Update
Time for news update. This week @WSHCrew discuss about Tess exoplanet, SN #11 goes boom, satellite light pollution, and neutrino observatory.
Jan 28th: Climate Change Affects Harvest, Rocks, Shorelines… and Truffles?
Climate change is a leading problem in today’s society, and today we have a quartet of stories on its affect on the world around us. Plus, more coverage from the AAS meeting with three stories on black holes, as well as dating supernovae, breaking a star, and magnetic chaos in a galaxy.
Jan 4th: We’re all Made of Supernovae
This week we complete the stellar trilogy to answer the question, What happens to the really, really, really big stars when they die?
Two weeks ago we talked about where stars come from, and last week we discussed how stars die. This week we complete the stellar trilogy to answer the question, What happens to the really, really, really big stars when they die?