FEBRUARY 21, 2018 9:45 pm
Peering at a distant galaxy, an amateur astronomer in Argentina managed to capture a star in the act of going supernova. The chances of this discovery, scientists say, are 1-in-a-million at best.
This lucky find, described in the journal Nature, offers the first images of the sudden brightening caused by a shock in the stars core a process that had been theorized but never observed.
This is the first confirmation of the existence of this phase, which is really in agreement with the models, said lead author Melina Bersten, an astrophysicist at the Instituto de Astrofisica de La Plata in Argentina.
. . .
SN 2016gkg was spotted in September 2016 by study coauthor Victor Buso, an amateur astronomer based out of Rosario, Argentina. Buso had been testing a new camera on his 16-inch telescope by aiming it at spiral galaxy NGC 613, which lies roughly 80 million light-years away in the constellation Sculptor.
More:
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/space/go-for-launch/la-sci-sn-supernova-birth-camera-20180221-story.html