Today in the history of astronomy, an amateur astronomer photographs the early moments of a supernova for the first time.
Supernova 2016gkg (indicated by red bars) is in the spiral galaxy NGC 613, located 70 million to 80 million light-years from Earth. On Sept. 20, 2016, Víctor Buso captured the initial burst of light from this supernova. Credit: UC-Santa Cruz/Las Campanas Observatory.
- Amateur astronomer Victor Buso captured images of NGC 613 on September 20, 2016, using a new camera.
- Buso’s time-series images revealed a point of light appearing and rapidly brightening over approximately 25 minutes.
- This observation is identified as the initial light from a supernova shock breakout.
- The event represents the first known observation of a supernova shock breakout, providing data for validating existing stellar explosion models.
On Sept. 20, 2016, Victor Buso was testing a new camera in his rooftop observatory. Buso, an amateur astronomer from Rosario, Argentina, shot a series of images of spiral galaxy NGC 613, which is about 70 million to 80 million light-years away in Sculptor. Checking to see how the new camera had worked, Buso reviewed the photos that he had just taken across the span of about an hour. There he saw a point of light not present in the first few shots, then appearing and shining faintly, and then beginning to rapidly brighten for about 25 minutes. Buso had captured an incredibly rare event: the first minutes of light emerging from the shock breakout of a supernova explosion. It was the first known observation of such an event, and provided data for an international research team to validate models of stellar explosions.