ESO — Reaching New Heights in Astronomy
Unsubscribe | Subscription preferences | View in browser
European
Southern
Observatory
ESO News
9 February 2015

Astronomers using ESO facilities in combination with telescopes in the Canary Islands have identified two surprisingly massive stars at the heart of the planetary nebula Henize 2-428. As they orbit each other the two stars are expected to slowly get closer and closer, and when they merge, about 700 million years from now, they will contain enough material to ignite a vast supernova explosion. The results will appear online in the journal Nature on 9 February 2015.

The release, images and videos are available on:
http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1505/

Translations are available on other countries page: Österreich, BelgiëBelgiqueBelgien, Brasil, Chile, Česko, Danmark, Suomi, France, Deutschland, Ísland, Italia, Nederland, Norge, Polska, Portugal, Россия, Srbija, España, Sverige, SuisseSchweizSvizzera, Türkiye, Україна

Kind regards,
The ESO Education and Public Outreach Department
9 February 2015

Share this newsletter on:

*|FACEBOOK:LIKE|*   *|TWITTER:TWEET|*   *|GOOGLE:BUZZ|*
*|MC:SHARE|* Receive our News in your preferred language

Start receiving this newsletter in your language



New on eso.org




Upcoming Events

 
Midsummer Night Brings Sprites — Rare phenomenon caught on camera at La Silla  Celestial Nomad Takes Centre Stage  Sunset and Moonset  A Flat Armazones  Wings for Science Fly Over APEX 

You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed to ESO News.

Unsubscribe | Subscription preferences | View in browser

Follow us on:

Facebook Twitter Vimeo Flickr YouTube LinkedIn Google+ Pinterest Itunes Scribd Issuu Livestream

European Southern Observatory, Karl-Schwarzschild-Str 2, D-85748 Garching bei München, Germany