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New observations from the infrared Herschel Space Observatory reveal that an exploding
star expelled the equivalent of between 160,000 and 230,000
Earth
masses of fresh dust. This enormous quantity suggests that exploding
stars, called supernovae, are the answer to the long-standing puzzle of
what supplied our early universe with dust.
“This discovery illustrates the power of tackling a problem in astronomy
with different wavelengths of light,” said Paul Goldsmith, the NASA
Herschel project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif., who is not a part of the current study.
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