Steve Capps wondered how neutrinos
inside an exploding star could push a shock wave toward the star's surface to make it go supernova.
Not exact matches
It explains how the atoms that made up that dust and gas were synthesised
inside stars billions of years before that, and how thestars
exploded and blew the atoms out into space.
Or they were all already
inside the «
star» that
exploded and created the universe?
«Our three - dimensional map is a rare look at the
insides of an
exploded star,» says Dan Milisavljevic of the Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA).
That's according to a new analysis — part of the biggest census of
star - forming regions to date — that focused on
stars eight times the mass of our sun or larger (the size that eventually
explode as supernovae) at a very early stage in their lifetime, when they'd still be
inside the clouds of gas and dust where they formed.
The U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory developed this model of an
exploding star's core to help elucidate what happens
inside core - collapse supernovae.
Evolutionists therefore believe that the hundred or so heavier chemical elements (97 % of all chemical elements) were produced either deep
inside stars or when some
stars exploded as supernovas.
As this Universe Today article explains, eventually something happens — a supernova
explodes nearby, for instance, or a passing
star exerts its gravity — to change the pressure
inside the cloud, causing it to collapse into a disk.
Explode into the classic PlayStation shooter with an entirely new perspective — get ready to defend your planet once more, this time from
inside the cockpit of your powerful
star fighter.