A concise illustrated introduction to the history and physics of supernovae, the brilliant explosions of stars; with striking color illustrations.
 


Supernovae are the explosions of stars. They are some of the most energetic phenomena in the Universe, rivaling the combined light of billions of stars. Supernovae have been studied for centuries, and they have also made appearances in popular culture: a glimpse of a supernova in a painting provides Sherlock Holmes with a crucial clue, for example. In this volume in the MIT Press Essential Knowledge series, astrophysicist Or Graur offers a concise and accessible introduction to these awe-inspiring astronomical phenomena. 
 
Graur explains that a deep observational understanding of supernovae—why and how they shine and how their brightness changes over time—allows us to use them as tools for experiments in astrophysics and physics. A certain type of supernova, for example, brightens and fades in such a predictable manner that we can measure the distances to their host galaxies. We owe our existence to supernovae—they give us iron for our blood and calcium for our bones. But supernovae may also have caused a mass extinction event on Earth 2.6 million years ago.
 
Graur shows how observations of supernovae played a role in the transformation of astronomy from astrology to astrophysics; surveys the tools used to study supernovae today; and describes the lives and deaths of stars and the supernova remnants, neutron stars, and black holes they leave behind. Illustrations in both color and black and white, many from Graur’s own Hubble Space Telescope data, make this account of supernovae particularly vivid.
 
"Supernovae — exploding stars — were first observed as far back as AD 185, by Chinese astronomers. In 1998, their use to measure distances to faraway galaxies enabled the discovery that the Universe’s expansion is accelerating — part of an astrophysics revolution. “I sincerely hope that in ten years, twenty at most, this book will be woefully out of date,” writes astrophysicist Or Graur in his accessible introduction. It includes a periodic table coloured to show chemical elements formed from supernovae, such as calcium and iron."
 —Nature
Or Graur is Senior Lecturer in Astrophysics at the University of Portsmouth’s Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation.
Series Foreword ix
Introduction xi
1 Supernovae through the Ages 1
2 Supernovae in the Modern Era 19
3 Enlightened by Light 39
4 The Lives and Deaths of Stars 57
5 Supernovae, the Universe, and Us 81
6 Supernovae as Tools 99
7 Burning Questions 121
8 A Bright Future 143
Conclusions 167
Acknowledgments 171
Units and Elementary Particles 173
Glossary 175
Notes 183
Further Reading 203
Index 205

About

A concise illustrated introduction to the history and physics of supernovae, the brilliant explosions of stars; with striking color illustrations.
 


Supernovae are the explosions of stars. They are some of the most energetic phenomena in the Universe, rivaling the combined light of billions of stars. Supernovae have been studied for centuries, and they have also made appearances in popular culture: a glimpse of a supernova in a painting provides Sherlock Holmes with a crucial clue, for example. In this volume in the MIT Press Essential Knowledge series, astrophysicist Or Graur offers a concise and accessible introduction to these awe-inspiring astronomical phenomena. 
 
Graur explains that a deep observational understanding of supernovae—why and how they shine and how their brightness changes over time—allows us to use them as tools for experiments in astrophysics and physics. A certain type of supernova, for example, brightens and fades in such a predictable manner that we can measure the distances to their host galaxies. We owe our existence to supernovae—they give us iron for our blood and calcium for our bones. But supernovae may also have caused a mass extinction event on Earth 2.6 million years ago.
 
Graur shows how observations of supernovae played a role in the transformation of astronomy from astrology to astrophysics; surveys the tools used to study supernovae today; and describes the lives and deaths of stars and the supernova remnants, neutron stars, and black holes they leave behind. Illustrations in both color and black and white, many from Graur’s own Hubble Space Telescope data, make this account of supernovae particularly vivid.
 

Reviews

"Supernovae — exploding stars — were first observed as far back as AD 185, by Chinese astronomers. In 1998, their use to measure distances to faraway galaxies enabled the discovery that the Universe’s expansion is accelerating — part of an astrophysics revolution. “I sincerely hope that in ten years, twenty at most, this book will be woefully out of date,” writes astrophysicist Or Graur in his accessible introduction. It includes a periodic table coloured to show chemical elements formed from supernovae, such as calcium and iron."
 —Nature

Author

Or Graur is Senior Lecturer in Astrophysics at the University of Portsmouth’s Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation.

Table of Contents

Series Foreword ix
Introduction xi
1 Supernovae through the Ages 1
2 Supernovae in the Modern Era 19
3 Enlightened by Light 39
4 The Lives and Deaths of Stars 57
5 Supernovae, the Universe, and Us 81
6 Supernovae as Tools 99
7 Burning Questions 121
8 A Bright Future 143
Conclusions 167
Acknowledgments 171
Units and Elementary Particles 173
Glossary 175
Notes 183
Further Reading 203
Index 205