NASA reports that T Coronae Borealis, a white dwarf star 3,000 light-years away from the solar system, will likely explode as a nova this spring or summer. It's a predictable event every 80 years ...
Elizabeth Hays, chief of the Astroparticle Physics Laboratory at NASA Goddard, told ABC7 in a live interview that this "zombie star" explodes in a blaze of light every 80 years or so, due to it ...
“We hope that it happens any day now,” Rebekah Hounsell, a nova researcher at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, told the ...
NASA first put the astronomic event on space-lovers’ radar in June and anticipation has been building the last three months — but the nova is unpredictable. The last time it was seen on Earth ...