HomeScienceScientists link Pacific sediment anomaly to ancient supernova explosion

Scientists link Pacific sediment anomaly to ancient supernova explosion

Beryllium-10 spike in Pacific sediments hints at nearby supernova 10 million years ago, revealing cosmic impacts on Earth’s history.

October 12, 2025 / 11:25 IST
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Chandra image shows Cassiopeia A, the youngest supernova remnant in the Milky Way. (Image: NASA)
Chandra image shows Cassiopeia A, the youngest supernova remnant in the Milky Way. (Image: NASA)

An inexplicable spike of beryllium-10 was found in Pacific Ocean sediments by a team of international researchers which implies that a supernova explosion may have occurred nearby some 10 million years ago.

Beryllium-10 is a radioactive isotope and forms whenever cosmic rays hit Earth's atmosphere, meaning it can provide a cosmic fingerprint and clues to past astronomical happenings.

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The Cosmic Origins of the Spike

Leveraging data from the European Space Agency’s Gaia survey, scientists attempted to reconstruct how the Sun and neighbouring star clusters moved through space over the past 20 million years. This data shows there is a 68% chance that a supernova exploded within 326 light-years of Earth around the time of the beryllium-10 spike and possibly affected the cosmic environment of our planet.