Saturday, August 20, 2005

Inner Supernova View


Aug 18, 2005 - One of the most famous supernovae in recent memory is SN 1987A, which exploded in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Before its death, the star produced a ferocious stellar wind that carved out a large bubble in the surrounding, colder gas. When it went supernova, a shockwave traveled out in space, and astronomers have been waiting in anticipation for the shockwave to slam into the edge of this bubble. New images from NASA's Chandra X-Ray Observatory shows that this stage now appears to be underway.

The supernova occurred in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a galaxy only 160,000 light years from Earth. The outburst was visible to the naked eye, and is the brightest known supernova in almost 400 years. The site of the explosion was traced to the location of a blue supergiant star called Sanduleak -69� 202 (SK -69 for short) that had a mass estimated at approximately 20 Suns.

Inner supernova image is uncreated by seeing from sight, obviously stay in silence peace cross meditaion moment to moment, It's appearing the body energy field balancing zone for time traval needs, once a boom after white hot through
the end all the way down where we being will face to turth of silence indeed deepth of our conciousness.

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