14-Year-Old Discovers Rare Supernova
If nine-year-olds can work for Microsoft and become feared professional gamers, why can't a 14-year-old leave her mark on the world of astronomy? Oh, wait, she can -- as proven by Caroline Moore, a student from upstate New York who discovered an exploding star that occurred in a galaxy roughly 70 million light years away.
All the way back in November, Caroline spotted the faint glow in the sky with nothing more than a low-powered telescope. Word got out and after months of monitoring at some of the most advanced installations in the world, astronomers decided that the explosion was a curiously small supernova.
This particular example was of special note because it was much less powerful than your normal supernova -- if you can call gigantic stars exploding with so much energy that their light can outshine entire galaxies "normal." Indeed, scientists believe that the explosion Caroline detected could be the weakest supernova ever recorded. Astrophysicists like Ryan Foley of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics have speculated that this particular instance was an explosion that failed, perhaps only partially destroying the star. Still, the object was labeled 'SN 2008ha,' technically classing it a supernova.
"Coincidentally, the youngest person to ever discover a supernova found one of the most peculiar and interesting supernovae ever," Alex Filippenko, leader of the University of California, Berkeley supernova group, told the Space Fellowship. "This shows that no matter what your age, anyone can make a significant contribution to our understanding of the Universe."
Caroline is just the latest in a long line of amateur astronomers who have made important contributions to the understanding of our universe. Check out the gallery below for a few more ordinary people who made extraordinary discoveries. [From: Space Fellowship]
Gallery: Amateur Astronomers
The 5 Greatest Planet-Exploring Robots
If its mission succeeds in 2012, NASA's latest Mars rover, the newly christened Curiosity will join an elite group of robots that have managed to touch down safely on an alien world. Click through to see Curiosity's five greatest forbearers.
Luna 9
Two and a half years before Neil Armstrong's giant leap, the Soviets' unmanned Luna 9 probe touched down on the surface of the Moon on February 3, 1966. For three days, it beamed back the first videos and panoramic photos from a heavenly body.
Venera 7
On August 17, 1970, the Soviet Venera 7 probe crash-landed on Venus and became the first spacecraft to survey our nearest planetary neighbor. What it found wasn't pretty: A hellish world with metal-melting temperatures of 475 degrees Fahrenheit and crushing atmospheric pressure 93 times greater than Earth's.
Viking 1 and 2
After three attempts by the USSR, NASA succeeded in landing the first robot on Mars when Viking 1 touched down on July 20, 1976. (Its sibling, Viking 2, landed on September 3.) Although designed for a 90-day mission, the landers spent over 6 years surveying the planet.
NEAR Shoemaker
On February 14 , 2000, Shoemaker locked into orbit around 433 Eros, an asteroid orbiting just past Mars. Though Shoemaker wasn't designed to land on Eros, NASA engineers successfully plunked it down on the rock after its one-year mission.
Huygens Saturn Probe
A joint American-European mission touched-down a probe called Huygens on the surface of Saturn's largest moon, Titan, on January 14, 2005. Nearly half the size of Earth, Titan is the only moon in the solar system with an atmosphere -- which allowed Huygens to make a leisurely two-and-a-half-hour parachute descent while measuring the atmosphere and snapping photos of the terrain. It continued to send back data for an hour and ten minutes after it landed.




Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Margaret n. Lutteral, Esq., (p.s. nobody has my same name said 2:32PM on 6-17-2009
BRAVO, for this curious young girl who likes to peek at the stars. She is GREAT already. MAY SHE HAVE AN EVEN GREATER FUTURE FILLED WITH DISCOVERIES AND FUN.
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jbjg24m said 2:42PM on 6-17-2009
I ONCE OWNED A 1974 SS NOVA WITH A 350 ENGINE AND FOUR IN THE FLOOR STRAIGHT DRIVE ! WOULD OUTRUN EVERYTHING AROUND MY HOMETOWN ! LOL !!
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bpeter3196 said 4:09PM on 6-17-2009
Doesn't say much for your down then.
Dave McClure said 3:06PM on 6-17-2009
Good for this young lady! I hope she continues to look into space in search of many wonders.
Dave
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Ronney said 3:11PM on 6-17-2009
This 14 year old girl, Caroline Moore, is incredibly inspiring! I wish her the best and brightest of futures. Please continue to help and enlighten our understanding of the world.
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Alan W. said 3:22PM on 6-17-2009
You go, girl! We are proud of you!
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bpeter3196 said 4:08PM on 6-17-2009
Good for her women are smarter then us men.
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chuck said 4:15PM on 6-17-2009
That's awesome. I remember how inspired I was looking at the stars at that age. I still am, but what an amazing feeling that must be to discover something like that at such a young age.
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Yon said 4:24PM on 6-17-2009
What? A mere woman? A mere girl? Just wait until the Islamists get a hold of her and teach her the true beliefs. The Earth is flat, 1300 years old and the moon is cheese... Or else!
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g4theweb said 4:34PM on 6-17-2009
wow a supernova.. and that does what for world dissaray? Aha.. yeah I thought so. There are people whose souls are dying everyday because the human being cannot support their fellow-men/women.. but a twinkle in the sky.. yeah let's all stop and focus on that.. let's put that up on AOL as a big story.
::gulp:: we're all in big, big trouble!
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dprobkw said 1:16PM on 6-18-2009
And your contribution was what today, spending energy using that computer to type about this girl. Dont throw stones in glass houses!
giorgio trani said 5:16PM on 6-17-2009
Thank God for Bush
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dude said 9:09PM on 6-17-2009
It's Bush's fault! Or is it Obama's fault? I can't tell; when is the cut-off point where things become Obama's fault and not Bush's? It's curious; if administrations, such as Obama's, can blame their current position on the previous administration, then Bush has every right to blame 9-11 on Clinton.
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paul said 9:50AM on 6-18-2009
don" be an ass, Bush and his administration is to blame for the trouble's we have today, Obama has done more for us in 5 months than Bush did in 8 yrs
kathryn said 1:00PM on 6-18-2009
it's gonna be a very long time before obama administration can stop blaming the bush administration for the country's woes. why? u know y. bush has essed this country up so bad that it will take years to repair what he messed up. 8 years from now it will still be bush's fault for messing up everything . and if republicans keep fighing obama on everytthan it will be the republicans fault.
Carol said 5:50PM on 6-17-2009
And we needed an article like this to prove that not only scientists, researchers, doctors can discover things? If kids were allowed to study cancer, its cause(s) - (electromagnetic radiation from power lines, cell phone and wifi towers and antennas, FM radio signals, radar) - would have been discovered by now.
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taynfiasgma said 12:57PM on 6-18-2009
Yes, and if we hadn't aborted 1/3 of her generation, think what else may have been done?
LVDIVER said 6:18PM on 6-17-2009
So she discovers this super nova with a low powered telescope ? Great ! Why wasn't it discovered by our experienced astronomers using great big gonzo telescopes supported by government grants - tax dollars ???
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bailoutsos said 6:57PM on 6-17-2009
I think she has earned a trip on the space shuttle.
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p said 7:03PM on 6-17-2009
I think she has earned a free trip to a shuttle launch.
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