A 'new star' could appear in the sky any night now. Here's how to see the Blaze Star ignite (2024)

A 'new star' could appear in the sky any night now. Here's how to see the Blaze Star ignite (1)

A dim star in the night sky 3,000 light-years from oursolar systemcould soon become visible to the naked eye for the first time since 1946 — and you can easily find it in the night sky.

The "Blaze Star" — officially calledT Coronae Borealis(T CrB) — is expected to brighten significantly between now and September 2024 from magnitude +10 (beyond naked-eye visibility) to magnitude +2, according toNASA. That's about the same brightness as Polaris, the North Star, the 48th-brightest star in the night sky. (In astronomy, the brighter an object is, the lower its magnitude; the full moon's magnitude is -12.6, for example).

The Blaze Star can be found in the constellation Corona Borealis, the "Northern Crown," between the constellations of Boötes and Hercules. The easiest way of finding Corona Borealis is by first locating some of the brightest stars in the summer night sky.

Related: A rare nova ignites a 'new star' in the sky this year

On any clear night, find the stars of the Big Dipper high in the northern sky. Trace the Big Dipper's handle of stars in a curve to Arcturus, a bright, reddish star above the eastern horizon. That's the famous "arc to Arcturus" star-hop. Rising in the east-northeast will be Vega. Now look between Arcturus and Vega (slightly closer to Arcturus) for a faint curl of seven stars — Corona Borealis. It will be high overhead after dark. Though you won’t be able to see the Blaze Star yet, it should become clearly visible before summer’s end.

A 'new star' could appear in the sky any night now. Here's how to see the Blaze Star ignite (2)

The Blaze Star is a rare example of a recurrent nova, which means "new star" in Latin. It's a binary star system with a cool, red giant star and a smaller, hotter white dwarf star orbiting each other. Every 80 years, the red giant propels matter onto the surface of the white dwarf, causing an explosion. Other stars do something similar, but not on such a short timescale.

Astronomers think the Blaze Star is on the cusp of exploding again because it's following the same pattern as the last two explosions in 1866 and 1946. Ten years before both explosions, it got somewhat brighter, then finally dimmed again just before the big blast. That's precisely what's been happening, with the star growing brightersince 2015, followed bya visible dimming in March 2023. This familiar pattern suggests that another explosion is imminent.

Related Stories:

NASA exoplanet hunter finds 'weird' world surviving a star's relentless bombardment — it's named Phoenix

The brightest planets in June's night sky: How to see them (and when)

Are stars vanishing into their own black holes? A bizarre binary system says 'yes'

On February 10, 1946, the Blaze Star was600 times brighterthan it was just one week before. Once its brightness peaks, the Blaze Star should be visible to the naked eye for several days and just over a week with a pair ofstargazing binocularsor a goodsmall telescope.

Join our Space Forums to keep talking space on the latest missions, night sky and more! And if you have a news tip, correction or comment, let us know at: community@space.com.

Jamie is an experienced science, technology and travel journalist and stargazer who writes about exploring the night sky, solar and lunar eclipses, moon-gazing, astro-travel, astronomy and space exploration. He is the editor ofWhenIsTheNextEclipse.comand authorofA Stargazing Program For Beginners, and is a senior contributor at Forbes. His special skill is turning tech-babble into plain English.

More about stargazing

Sweet Strawberry Moon, first full moon of summer, thrills stargazers around the world (photos)Summer solstice 2024 is here! See celebrations at Stonehenge and beyond (photos)

Latest

This Week In Space podcast: Episode 116 —Spreading the Good Word
See more latest►

2 CommentsComment from the forums

  • Helio

    Cool. And it will be in the night sky through September, at least.

    Here is the location:

    Reply

  • m4n8tpr8

    The article writes: "Every 80 years, the red giant propels matter onto the surface of the white dwarf, causing an explosion."

    Nitpick: that's misleading. The red giant propels matter onto the surface of the white dwarf all the time, what happens every 80 years is that enough matter accumulates for fusion to start, which causes the explosion.

    To be even more correct, it's not the red giant but the white dwarf's own gravity that propels the red giant's matter to its surface. The red giant just tries to expand, but all the plasma that moves beyond the zone where its own gravity dominates ("Roche lobe") falls into the zone dominated by the white dwarf's gravity.

    Reply

Most Popular
The rotation of Earth's inner core is slowing down
Summer solstice 2024 is here! See celebrations at Stonehenge and beyond (photos)
Virgin Galactic announces international crew for flight on new Delta class space plane
The Predator lands in Wakanda in new 'Predator vs Black Panther' series
When a dangerous asteroid threatens Earth, humanity will have to work together, NASA says
Why smaller planets are better at building large moons
Space photo of the week: 'Earthrise,' the Christmas Eve image that changed the world
Strawberry Solstice Moon of June 2024 shines tonight for summer stargazers (video)
Pentagon picks SpaceX, Blue Origin and ULA for $5.6 billion launch deal
Saturn's planet-wide storms driven by seasonal heating, Cassini probe reveals
How neutron stars 'playing it cool' could unlock exotic physics
A 'new star' could appear in the sky any night now. Here's how to see the Blaze Star ignite (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Melvina Ondricka

Last Updated:

Views: 5659

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (48 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Melvina Ondricka

Birthday: 2000-12-23

Address: Suite 382 139 Shaniqua Locks, Paulaborough, UT 90498

Phone: +636383657021

Job: Dynamic Government Specialist

Hobby: Kite flying, Watching movies, Knitting, Model building, Reading, Wood carving, Paintball

Introduction: My name is Melvina Ondricka, I am a helpful, fancy, friendly, innocent, outstanding, courageous, thoughtful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.