No companion in supernova debris

Explosion probably resulted from two white dwarfs

The bubble-shaped remnant of SN 1006, a type 1a supernova, reveals that two white dwarf stars probably triggered the massive stellar explosion, which went off more than a millennium ago.

The bubble-shaped remnant of SN 1006, a type 1a supernova, reveals that two white dwarf stars probably triggered the massive stellar explosion. X-ray: NASA, CXC, G. Cassam-Chenaï and J. Hughes et al/Rutgers Univ.; Radio: NRAO, AUI, NSF, GBT, K. Dyer, R. Maddalena and T. Cornwell/VLA; Optical: F. Winkler/Middlebury College, NOAO, AURA, NSF, CTIO, Schmidt/DSS

Type 1a supernovas ignite when a white dwarf steals too much mass from an orbiting companion star — though the population of objects that serves as victim to such stellar burgling is uncertain.

A team of astronomers searching SN 1006’s 60-light-year-wide remnant for a large companion (which would now be zooming away from the explosion’s epicenter) came up empty. The result, published in the Sept. 27 Nature, suggests either that the explosion involved two white dwarf stars, both of which were obliterated by the blast, or that the doomed dwarf’s companion was smaller than the sun.

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