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Space

Strange stars full of metals may be created by imploding supernovae

After a star explodes, the resulting supernova remnant collapses in on itself and could begin the cycle again, creating generations of stars enriched with heavy elements

By Leah Crane

22 August 2024

A supernova remnant in the Milky Way galaxy

Chandra X-ray Observatory

After a star explodes in a supernova, the remnants can reform into more stars again and again. These subsequent generations could be full of elements heavier than helium that astronomers refer to as metals, which could explain why the cosmos is littered with puzzlingly metal-rich stars.

Supernovae are often thought of as explosions, but in the later stages of their evolution, they slam into particles in the surrounding interstellar medium and begin to implode instead. This creates a dense cloud of gas and dust, enriched with all of the…

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