Keck Telescope looks at long-ago death of 2 stars
Astronomers using the Keck Telescope on Mauna Kea have spotted the most distant and oldest star explosions yet in the universe.
Scientists captured the fuzzy death throes of two supernovae that date back nearly 11 billion years. A supernova is the violent death of a star.
The astronomers looked through archives of telescope images to find possible faint star deaths. This type of supernova leaves a shell-like remnant. So after finding signs of explosions, they confirmed them by spotting the remnants using the Keck Telescope. The study is in today's issue of the journal Nature.
Study author Jeff Cooke at the University of California-Irvine, said this new technique may eventually find the first deaths of stars in the universe.