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- Newsgroups: sci.astro
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!bruce.cs.monash.edu.au!monu6!aurora.cc.monash.edu.au!ins894r
- From: ins894r@aurora.cc.monash.edu.au (Aaron Wigley [Wigs])
- Subject: Re: Supernova (Was Re: P/Swift-Tuttle at last!)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.233634.8780@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au>
- Sender: news@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au (Usenet system)
- Reply-To: wigs@yoyo.cc.monash.edy.au
- Organization: Monash University
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL6]
- References: <1edk30INNbd7@transfer.stratus.com>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 23:36:34 GMT
- Lines: 54
-
- Tarl Neustaedter (tarl@sw.stratus.com) wrote:
- : In article <1992Nov14.043817.3016@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au>, ins894r@aurora.cc.monash.edu.au (Aaron Wigley [Wigs]) writes:
- : > Then, all of a sudden I saw a very brief flash off centre from
- : > one of the Clouds.
- : >[,,,]
- : > Until the next day, when I read about it in the newspaper. I happened to
- : > have witnessed Supernova 1987A :-)
- :
- : From the smiley, I assumed you were making a joke, but someone else seems
- : to have taken it seriously.
-
- No, no Joke intended.
-
- : So I'll comment:
- : If you saw a brief flash, it wasn't SN1987A. The neutrino flash was several
- : seconds long, and the visual portion would have taken hours for the
- : shockwave to arrive at the surface of the star. (Stellar atmospheres are
- : not transparent). Once the shockwave did arrive, the brightness increase
- : would be gradual, as larger and larger portions of the surface visible to
- : you showed the effects (it's a sphere, and the closest portion is light-
- : hours closer to you than the edge). After the effects hit the surface, the
- : brightness would not fall back - the gas is still hot and size is still
- : increasing due to the explosion.
-
- Okay. People have sent Email to me regarding this observation. This is
- what I can remeber. I can dig out other information at home, and post later.
-
- o What I saw could be more accurately described as a prolonged flare
- (not a fraction of a second flash). The flare was brief, I did not
- have time to get my friends to look at it, but it was not over
- instantly. I would say duration was two, two and a half seconds.
- o At the time I would not consider my eyes to be fully adapted to the
- dark, as I had previously been inside a lighted room about 10
- minutes before. The observation was performed
- outside the Warrnambool Royal Life Saving Society clubhouse, in Victoria,
- Australia (I can get Latitude and longitude if it is needed).
- o The sky was clear, with only some twinkling in the stars. Considering this
- observation was in a small city (on the outskirts), light pollution
- may have dampened the flare.
- o The event happened in the region off-centre of the (from Memory, I may
- be wrong) Large Magellenic Cloud. The Time was about 2115 local time,
- (I cannot remember if Daylight saving time was in effect then - it would
- depend on the date I will look up), on a Thursday night. Local time
- is 10 hours ahead of UMT.
-
- If someone needs any further information, please don't hesitate to ask/etc.
-
- : Tarl Neustaedter tarl@sw.stratus.com
- : Marlboro, Mass. Stratus Computer
- : Disclaimer: My employer is not responsible for my opinions.
-
- The Wigs of Oz,
- Aaron Wigley
-
-