Astronomers Unveil First Direct Supernova Breakout Shape Measurement, Challenging Explosion Models

November 30, 2025
Astronomers Unveil First Direct Supernova Breakout Shape Measurement, Challenging Explosion Models
  • By around day 10, hydrogen-rich outer layers surfaced along the same axis, suggesting a stable, directional explosion mechanism throughout the event.

  • Astronomers achieved the first-ever direct measurement of a supernova's initial breakout shape using spectropolarimetry with the VLT FORS2 instrument, revealing an elongated, non-spherical explosion.

  • The initial shock was stretched along one axis, indicating the explosion was directional from the very start rather than perfectly spherical.

  • An artist’s impression highlights the breakout phase, emphasizing the newly observed asymmetry in the early evolution of the supernova.

  • The event, SN 2024ggi, occurred in galaxy NGC 3621, about 22 million light-years away in the Hydra constellation, with first light detected by ATLAS on April 10, 2024 and follow-up observations the next day.

  • These observations challenge or constrain existing supernova models, offering new insights into how massive stars die and how shocks propagate through stellar material.

  • The study detailing these findings was published on November 12, 2025, in Science Advances.

Summary based on 1 source


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