A star called T Corona Borealis may "go nova" next week, making the star briefly visible to the naked eye. It last happened ...
Astronomers detected constant stream of radio pulses emitted from across the galaxy. Team now finds the pulses are from a white dwarf and red dwarf binary. The stars’ orbit is so tight that their ...
The imminent explosion of T Coronae Borealis is expected to create a temporary 'new star' in the night sky this week ...
coming from the direction of the Big Dipper. After combining observations from multiple telescopes, the team can now reveal the culprit: a binary system with a dead star. According to the new study, a ...
Northwestern University scientists have detected the first radio pulses that can be traced to a dead-star binary.
Astronomers say they have traced a mysterious pulsing in the Milky Way to a surprising source: a dead star locked in a dance ...
March 27, November 10, and June 25, 2026—for the next nova event of T Corona Borealis (T CrB). The predictions are based on ...
A rare nova explosion from T Coronae Borealis may be visible next week! Learn when and how to see this once-in-80-years celestial event in the night sky.
A decade-long radio mystery has finally been solved: astronomers have linked repeating pulses to a white dwarf and red dwarf ...
The team tracked the signal back to a strange binary system containing a dead ... It came from the direction of the Big Dipper. This new research indicates that the cause of this repeating radio ...
The long radio blasts, which lasted between 30 and 90 seconds, appeared to come from the direction of the Ursa Major constellation, where the Big Dipper ... from this binary star system are ...