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On July 5, 1054, people all over the world must have been pretty stunned when a giant star bit the dust. The star had burned up its energy, collapsed in on itself and burst from the pressure. It was so bright that it could be seen all over the world - Irish, Japanese, Chinese, Arab and the Anasazi Indians in the New Mexico/Arizona area all have documentation referring to a similar incident during the same time frame. The Europeans almost definitely saw it as well, but documentation is markedly scarce - either they didn’t really care or were so scared that they just didn’t want to refer to it.
The explosion was so massive that scientists were able to study it 600 years later when the telescope was invented - gas and dust about seven light years from Earth could still be seen. In 1774, it was finally given a name - the Crab Nebula. Apparently someone thought it looked like a crustacean.
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That picture is amazing…
Can you imagine Europeans in the Dark Ages seeing this? The reason it´s not recorded is because they were all cowering under the bed thinking it was the end of the world!
posted by GTT on 10-10-2008 at 9:32 am
Call me crazy… aren’t isn’t Ireland in Europe? Perhaps you were refering to just the continent…
posted by Brittany on 10-10-2008 at 11:10 am
Not trying to be a jerk (ok, probably unsuccessful on that point), but there are some mistakes in this article. The Crab Nebula is over 5000 light years from the earth, not 7. Admittedly the article mentions “gas and dust seven light years from earth”, but that is not possible. (It does have an extent of approximately 7 light years, perhaps that’s the source of confusion.)
Also the nebula was not named until the 1840’s or so, by the Earl of Rosse.
I enjoy the mental_floss books, but I hope the new one is better fact-checked than this article leads me to believe.
posted by John W on 10-11-2008 at 12:05 pm