Astronomers Document a Not-so-Super Supernova in the Milky Way

Astronomers Document a Not-so-Super Supernova in the Milky Way
The binary star system CPD-29 2176, located about 11,000 light years from Earth in an undated illustration. NOIRLab/National Science Foundation/AURA/J. da Silva/Spaceengine/Handout via Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

WASHINGTON—Supernovas are not always so super. These explosions that mark the death of a star often are spectacularly energetic. But once in a while they are a complete dud.

Scientists on Wednesday detailed one of the duds—a massive star that had so much of its material siphoned off by the gravitational tug of a companion star in a stellar marriage called a binary system that by the time it came to explode at the end of its life cycle it could barely manage a whimper.