Iran Daily

5,000-year-old rock art found in India likely oldest depiction of supernova

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Imagine looking up at the sky one night and finding two moons. If it happened in 2017, Twitter would be abuzz with people posting photos. News channels would get astronomer­s to explain what’s happening, and they’d say it’s not a supernatur­al phenomenon but likely an exploding star — a supernova. Within hours, telescopes would have nailed down the exact star that suffered the dreadful fate. And then, likely for weeks to come, you’d be able to enjoy the presence of a very, very, very bright star in the sky.

Now imagine seeing the same sight 5,000 years ago. Nobody in your tribe has any clue why there’s suddenly an extra super-bright object in the night sky. There are no records, written or pictorial, to consult. However, curious as you and your tribemates might be, you aren’t going to risk asking someone in the rival tribe nearby. All you could do is wonder about the oddity — and perhaps try to represent it through your favorite artistic medium, qz.com reported.

Scientists say this is likely what happened back in 3600 BCE. Astrophysi­cist Mayank Vahia and his colleagues at the Tata Institute of Fundamenta­l Research believe a rock painting found in what is today part of the Kashmir region of south Asia is the oldest record of a supernova and likely the oldest sky chart ever drawn.

The artwork shows two bright objects in the sky, with figures of animals and humans underneath. A study detailing the discovery has been published in the Indian Journal of History of Science.

Vahia began the study by taking many steps backwards. Rock art is difficult to date with precision, but Vahia had a solid starting point. The rock was buried in a wall of a house that had already been dated to around 2100 BCE. The oldest known settlement in the region was founded around 4100 BCE. So the rock art is likely to have been made sometime between those two millennia — then inadverten­tly used to construct a new dwelling.

Next, Vahia needed to understand why someone would draw two bright objects in the sky. It couldn’t be two suns, because we have and have always had only one. It couldn’t be the sun and the moon, because although it’s possible to see both solar objects in the sky at the same time, a full moon can never appear so close to the sun. (From Earth, we see the moon as ‘full’ when it’s on the direct opposite side the planet as the sun.) The only remaining explanatio­n, Vahia figured, was a supernova: If one exploded relatively nearby our solar system (hundreds or few thousands of light years away), it could shine as bright as the sun or the moon.

When a supernova explodes, it releases a lot of energy. The energy we can see with the naked eye — is only a small fraction of what the explosion produces. The supernova continues to emit high-intensity X-rays for hundreds and thousands of years. Astronomer­s have been able to track down these supernova remnants and calculate when and how big the stellar explosion would have likely been.

With all constraint­s set, the database gave Vahia just one option: Supernova HB9. It seemed to have all the right characteri­stics. It exploded around 3600 BCE, and it’s about 2,600 light years away. At the time of its explosion, it would have appeared to Earthlings as a glowing ball (though not perfectly round) and just a little less bright than a full moon.

 ??  ?? MEHR NEWS AGENCY
MEHR NEWS AGENCY

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