HomeScienceAstronomers capture stunning two-sun explosion and the turbulent aftereffects

Astronomers capture stunning two-sun explosion and the turbulent aftereffects

Astronomers imaged two novae only days after eruption. They used the CHARA Array in California for clarity. The system captured expanding material around each erupting star.

December 10, 2025 / 16:20 IST
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Artistic rendering of Nova V1674 Herculis (Image: The CHARA Array)
Artistic rendering of Nova V1674 Herculis (Image: The CHARA Array)

A pair of stellar eruptions recently caught my attention. Their bright outbursts showed activity usually hidden from distant eyes. Each eruption revealed complex motions shaping dying stars. These fresh observations help scientists study fading stellar lives.

How were these stellar eruptions first observed?

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Astronomers imaged two novae only days after eruption. They used the CHARA Array in California for clarity. The system captured expanding material around each erupting star. The images exposed delayed ejections and several separate outflows. These findings appear in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. The detailed views show post-eruption behaviour far more intricate. The data now adds evidence for evolving galaxies.

What role do cosmic filaments play here?