I can't say I've ever heard of "high cadence monitoring observation" before attempting a search about neutrino detection of SN 2015F but this article claims to do it. Maybe someone can explain it to us?Ann wrote:There were no clues.ta152h0 wrote:this is a great catch. Was there a clue this was going to happen ?
A supernova explosion explosion is like a landmine. First there is nothing, then there is a bang. Yes, if astronomers could have carefully studied the particular progenitor of SN 2015F, they just might have caught some little signs that something was about to happen.
But the particular star system that gave rise to SN 2015F would have been far, far too faint even for Hubble to study in a meaningful way. The host galaxy is about 80 million light years away, and the progenitors of SN type Ia are typically relatively faint.
And what do we mean by saying that something is "about" to happen? That might just mean that a supernova could be happening very "soon" - like, say, in a thousand years. We can hardly expect the Hubble telescope to keep a unblinking eye on every moderately nearby galaxy for the next thousand years in order to catch any possible supernova as it happens before our descendants' eyes.
Ann
The information it provides is "sizable" and provides "far out" information.