Scientists Spotted Something That Appeared to Be Moving 7 Times the Speed of Light
Frank Landymore - Yesterday 9:59 AM
Back in 2017, scientists observed a spectacular collision of two neutron stars that blasted a jet of radiation so powerful that NASA says the energy it released was "comparable to that of a supernova," according to a press release by the agency.
But it's taken scientists until now to unpack all the data that was gathered because of its complexity. Among other intriguing findings: stuff appearing to travel faster than light — which, of course, is impossible. But don't worry. There's a perfectly reasonable explanation.
Joint Effort
The event, designated GW170817, is what's known as a binary neutron star merger. Neutron stars are the collapsed cores of once-massive stars and some of the densest objects in the universe. According to NASA, just a single teaspoon of one would weigh four billion tons on Earth.
With that sort of unfathomable density comes great gravity — enough to draw two of these neutron stars together in an explosive collision that launched gravitational waves and gamma radiation into space, making it the first time scientists have detected both from a neutron star merger, NASA says.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/scientists-spotted-something-that-appeared-to-be-moving-7-times-the-speed-of-light/ar-AA131c9E?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=625217290f364355a74c9fbd84cf6c83