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Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

EDIT... twoTwo days after seeing this topic, iI read a reportreport that identifies the imprints of a low mass supernova in meteorites of the solar system, by measuring which radioactive isotopes are in meteorites:

"Identifying these 'fingerprints' of the final supernova is what we needed to help us understand how the formation of the solar system was initiated," Professor Heger said.

 "The fingerprints uniquely point to a low-mass supernova as the trigger.

 "The findings in this paper have opened up a whole new direction of research focusing on low-mass supernovae," he said.

 In addition to explaining the abundance of Beryllium-10, this low-mass supernova model would also explain the short-lived nuclei Calcium-41, Palladium-107, and a few others found in meteorites.

"Identifying these 'fingerprints' of the final supernova is what we needed to help us understand how the formation of the solar system was initiated," Professor Heger said.

"The fingerprints uniquely point to a low-mass supernova as the trigger."

"The findings in this paper have opened up a whole new direction of research focusing on low-mass supernovae," he said.

In addition to explaining the abundance of Beryllium-10, this low-mass supernova model would also explain the short-lived nuclei Calcium-41, Palladium-107, and a few others found in meteorites.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. teegarden'sTeegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the sunSun came from and where it'sits neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why iI am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of it'sits group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly although not in a straight line. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

EDIT... two days after seeing this topic, i read a report that identifies the imprints of a low mass supernova in meteorites of the solar system, by measuring which radioactive isotopes are in meteorites:

"Identifying these 'fingerprints' of the final supernova is what we needed to help us understand how the formation of the solar system was initiated," Professor Heger said.

 "The fingerprints uniquely point to a low-mass supernova as the trigger.

 "The findings in this paper have opened up a whole new direction of research focusing on low-mass supernovae," he said.

 In addition to explaining the abundance of Beryllium-10, this low-mass supernova model would also explain the short-lived nuclei Calcium-41, Palladium-107, and a few others found in meteorites.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. teegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the sun came from and where it's neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why i am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of it's group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly although not in a straight line. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

Two days after seeing this topic, I read a report that identifies the imprints of a low mass supernova in meteorites of the solar system, by measuring which radioactive isotopes are in meteorites:

"Identifying these 'fingerprints' of the final supernova is what we needed to help us understand how the formation of the solar system was initiated," Professor Heger said.

"The fingerprints uniquely point to a low-mass supernova as the trigger."

"The findings in this paper have opened up a whole new direction of research focusing on low-mass supernovae," he said.

In addition to explaining the abundance of Beryllium-10, this low-mass supernova model would also explain the short-lived nuclei Calcium-41, Palladium-107, and a few others found in meteorites.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. Teegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the Sun came from and where its neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why I am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of its group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly although not in a straight line. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

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bandybabboon
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Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

EDIT... two days after seeing this topic, i read a report that identifies the imprints of a low mass supernova in meteorites of the solar system, by measuring which radioactive isotopes are in meteorites:

"Identifying these 'fingerprints' of the final supernova is what we needed to help us understand how the formation of the solar system was initiated," Professor Heger said.

 "The fingerprints uniquely point to a low-mass supernova as the trigger.

 "The findings in this paper have opened up a whole new direction of research focusing on low-mass supernovae," he said.

 In addition to explaining the abundance of Beryllium-10, this low-mass supernova model would also explain the short-lived nuclei Calcium-41, Palladium-107, and a few others found in meteorites.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. teegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the sun came from and where it's neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why i am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of it's group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly although not in a straight line. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. teegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the sun came from and where it's neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why i am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of it's group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly although not in a straight line. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

EDIT... two days after seeing this topic, i read a report that identifies the imprints of a low mass supernova in meteorites of the solar system, by measuring which radioactive isotopes are in meteorites:

"Identifying these 'fingerprints' of the final supernova is what we needed to help us understand how the formation of the solar system was initiated," Professor Heger said.

 "The fingerprints uniquely point to a low-mass supernova as the trigger.

 "The findings in this paper have opened up a whole new direction of research focusing on low-mass supernovae," he said.

 In addition to explaining the abundance of Beryllium-10, this low-mass supernova model would also explain the short-lived nuclei Calcium-41, Palladium-107, and a few others found in meteorites.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. teegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the sun came from and where it's neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why i am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of it's group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly although not in a straight line. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

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bandybabboon
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Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. teegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the sun came from and where it's neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why i am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of it's group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly although not in a straight line. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. teegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the sun came from and where it's neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why i am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of it's group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

Often stars can form when a supernova compresses surrounding clouds into higher densities with interstellar shock waves, and it can also send the stars outwards from the point of the supernova.

The speed at which star clusters diverge is relatively high, Teegarden's star for example is 11,502 Million years old, 12 ly away, and it's group's movement has been traced back roughly to a zone of origin, and the group's stars are twice as distant from each other as they were at their formation, the group spans at least 50 light years.

I don't want to get in over my head here, but after 4 billion years, stars of a group can be millions of light years apart. High velocity stars can move at 200 light years per million years (70km/s), so that's 200.000 light years per billion years. teegarden's star is moving that fast and it's 0.2 times the mass of the sun.

Teegarden's group are distancing themselves by about .5 light years per million years, and they are currently 10-60 light years away from the sun.

It will be a steep task to find where the sun came from and where it's neighbors are.

Proxima Centauri currently moves toward Earth at a rate of 22.4 km/s. Ηowever, after 26,700 years, when it will come as close as 3.11 light-years, it will begin to move farther away.

That's why i am surprised by the journal suggesting a stellar neighbour at 110 ly away, seeing as some of it's group can potentially have travelled 200,000 ly although not in a straight line. There are proper motion simulations on the web which are interesting to see.

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