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In July 1054, court astronomers in China recorded a new “guest star” near Tianguan, the star we now call Zeta Tauri. It was bright enough to be seen in daylight. For nearly a month it remained visible against the daytime sky, then lingered at night long after the first shock of its appearance had passed. Nearly a thousand years later, the object left behind by that explosion is still changing quic...
Nearly a millennium ago sky-watchers recorded a new star so bright it was visible in daylight for weeks, and Hubble has now traced how far its remnant, the Crab Nebula, has expanded since — a thousand-year | Huntaegis