Type Ia is a special kind of exploding star, like a firecracker that goes boom when it's ready.
Imagine you have two friends who really love to play together, one is white dwarf (a tiny, super-dense star), and the other is a regular star. They're in a dance called binary system, meaning they orbit each other like partners on the dance floor.
Now, every time the regular star spins around, it gives some of its stuff, like candy, to the white dwarf. The white dwarf keeps getting heavier and heavier, like when you keep adding more blocks to a tower.
One day, the white dwarf gets so heavy that it can’t hold itself together anymore, BOOM! It explodes in a supernova, shining really bright for a while, like a giant light bulb turning on in the sky. That’s what we call Type Ia supernova, a big, bright explosion from a special kind of star pair.
It's like when your toy car gets too full of batteries and suddenly zooms off, fast and bright!
Examples
- Imagine a star that gets so heavy it can't hold itself together anymore and explodes.
- Type Ia supernovae help scientists measure how far away galaxies are.
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See also
- What Is the Event Horizon of a Black Hole?
- What is supernova?
- What Is the James Webb Space Telescope Actually Seeing?
- What Makes Some Stars Explode and Others Simply Fade?
- What Makes Some Stars Explode and Others Just Fade?