Up & Coming Weekly

November 21, 2017

Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.

Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/905905

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 6 of 36

6 UCW NOVEMBER 22 - 28, 2017 WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM Today, class, in honor of the upcoming new Star Wars movie, Mr. Science will spend some time with us in a galaxy far, far away. According to a recent article in Trump's favorite newspaper, e Washington Post, there is some pretty weird stuff happening in outer space. Put on your Shakespeare hat and ponder what Hamlet said: "ere are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy." Turns out the philosophy of astrophysicists hasn't been dreaming wildly enough about supernovas. Supernovas are not to be confused with Chevy Novas. I personally drove to Key West in a Chevy Nova whose spare tire floated and sloshed in the wheel compart- ment all the way, but I digress. Supernovas are supposed to be rudely explosive but then politely follow the laws of physics after blowing up. e previously agreed upon etiquette for supernovas held that the star blows up with a huge explosion spewing out matter and energy for several months, which can be seen from billions of light years away. When the light show is over, a polite supernova shrinks down into either a black hole or a neutron star with gravity so great that even light can't escape it. Stealing and mangling a quote from Shake- speare's Macbeth, "a collapsed supernova struts and frets its hour upon the stage and then is heard no more. It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing." Collapsed supernovas are supposed act like Harvey Weinstein, Louis C.K. and Roy Moore by essentially disappearing after the big flash, never to be seen again. At least that was the rule until the rebel supernova named iPTF14hls came to the attention of the scientists at the Inter- mediate Palomar Transient Factory. is supernova, whose friends call it Ippy, does not behave like all the other supernovas. If all the other supernovas jumped off a roof, Ippy would take the ladder. Ippy lives in a galaxy about 500 million miles away. According to the Post article, Ippy blew up five times in the last two years. is can't be hap- pening. Once a supernova blows up, that is sup- posed to be the end of it. And yet Ippy perseveres in lighting up the night. Ippy, rather than blowing up once and for all and then settling into a nice long retirement as a black hole, keeps blowing up against all the rules. Ippy is hyperactive, and no amount of cosmic Ritalin can control its explo- sions. Astrophysicists report Ippy has sent out the equivalent of 50 Jupiters of matter and the energy of "10 quintillion suns." I have no earthly idea how many a quintillion is. It sounds like a really big number that would require sun block of at least SPF 6 zillion to avoid serious dermatological damage. Ippy may in fact be a zombie supernova, com- ing back from the dead repeatedly to mess with astronomers' brains. Because astronomers feel comfortable when they name things, Ippy has now been classified as a "pulsation pair instability supernova." is means Mr. Science has created a name for a phenomenon that he can't explain. A pulsation pair instability supernova is a fake supernova that happens "when a star 100 times bigger than the sun blows off some of its outer lay- ers." is theory may explain Ippy's recidivist behavior or it may not. Mr. Science does not know for sure. Supernovas are not supposed to come back from the dead, which Ippy has been doing since at least the 1950s. You can't keep a good zombie supernova down. So where does this leave us? What are we to make of Ippy, and how can we turn it into cash? Consider what Jiminy Cricket sang in Walt Disney's "Pinocchio" in "When You Wish Upon a Star." Jiminy pointed out, "When you wish upon a star/Makes no differ- ence who you are/Anything your heart desires will come to you/ If your heart is in your dream/No request is too extreme/Like a bolt out of the blue/ Fate steps in and sees you through/ When you wish upon a star/ Your dreams come true." Since Ippy is a zombie supernova and keeps coming back from the dead, it likely means Ippy can grant wishes each time he blows up. What to wish for? Perhaps a hit record? A world without Kardashians or presidential tweets? e elimina- tion of green peas from anksgiving dinner? Steve Bannon falling into a black hole? No more denials of Russian interference in our elections? Christ- mas ads before Halloween? e possibilities are endless. If we all clap our hands and make a wish, neither Ippy nor Tinkerbell will die. Mr. Science urges all of you out there to start clapping and wishing upon a Zombie Star. Makes no difference who you are. When you wish upon a zombie supernova by PITT DICKEY OPINION Collapsed supernovas are supposed act like Harvey Weinstein, Louis C.K. and Roy Moore by essentially disappearing after the big flash, never to be seen again. Photo credit: Rafael Cerqueira PITT DICKEY, Columnist. COMMENTS? Editor@upand- comingweekly.com. (910) 484-6200. one year special $ 15 for UP & CoMING WEEKLY rEadErs oNLY you save 89% off Tv GuIDe MaGaZINe Get A GreAt DeAL from tV GuiDe mAGAzine start Your subscription online, By Mail or Call online: tvguidemagazine.com/newsoffer mail: complete order form below call: 1-800-365-1940 WHeN CaLLING use PRoMo: K6fNsWPZZ Every issue delivers inside scoop on your favorite shows Breaking news keeps you in the know Highlights help guide you to what's worth watching Your favorite stars take you behind the scenes 28 Pages of easy-to-use primetime listings GrEaT rEasoNs To sTarT YoUr sUBsCrIPTIoN

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Up & Coming Weekly - November 21, 2017