In the constellation Cassiopeia, the remnants of a massive star’s explosion, known as Cas A, form a hot, expanding cloud of gas that holds the secrets of a supernova event that occurred approximately 11,000 years ago. By analyzing the expansion velocity of the debris and tracing its fragments to a common origin, astronomers estimate the explosion’s visible remnants are about 360 years old.
The event may have been inadvertently observed by the English astronomer John Flamsteed in 1680, who recorded a faint star in the direction of Cas A, which no longer exists today. While the exact details of Flamsteed’s observation do not align perfectly with Cas A’s inferred age and location, his sighting might represent the fleeting afterglow of the explosion.
A supernova – the cataclysmic death of a massive start – marks the end of its peaceful evolution. Powered by the radioactive decay of iron and titanium isotopes, the explosion’s afterglow can last for years. A typical galaxy will have a few supernova events in a century.
With modern telescopes and satellites, astronomers can detect a few dozen supernova events in nearby galaxies. However, the most dramatic phase of a supernova, the breakout shock through the star's surface, occurs in less than a day (a star has a lifetime of around ten billion days – so this is a tiny fraction of its lifetime), making it incredibly rare to capture. Fortunately, nature gave us another opportunity to witness the precise moment in which the star of Cas A was obliterated.