The Milky Way's Most Recent Supernova That Nobody Saw
StartsWithABang writes: A little over 300 years ago, a supernova — a dying, ultramassive star — exploded, giving rise to such a luminous explosion that it might have shone as bright as our entire galaxy. And nobody on Earth saw it. Located in the plane of our Milky Way galaxy, the light was obscured, but thanks to a suite of great, space-based observatories (Hubble, Spitzer, and Chandra), we've been able to piece together exactly what occurred. Not only that, but observations of a light-echo, or reflected light off of the nearby gas, has allowed us to see the light from this explosion centuries later, and learn exactly how it happened.
Every time I see a cool space/science story, despite having been an adult for some time now, I still get an awesome sense of "wow" out of it.
Keep on exploring the mysteries of the universe guys.
TFA says it was 11,000 light years away, so it took 11,000 years for the light to get to Earth. We should have seen it 300 years ago, but the explosion was a long time before that. So the summary's opening line of "A little over 300 years ago, a supernova ... exploded" is incorrect.
If you read the story, you find that it wasn't too dim to see, there was just something in the way. And if you can see a supernova from the far side of Earth, you are way too close.
How is this news? The video in TFA is from 2008, check the upload date on Youtube. There must be some weird time dilation effect going on, posting 2008 news is a new low, even for ./ on nowadays.