Category 4, Topic 4 Message 125 Thu Apr 01, 1993 ODY [Greg W-C] at 23:28 EST SUPERNOVA 1993J in M81, a galaxy in Ursa Major, was discovered by F. Garcia, a Spanish amateur astronomer on March 28. The object has brightened two magnitudes since discovery, and is currently about mag. 10. If it is a Type II supernova, as seems likely, it will continue to brighten for another week or so. By then, it could be as bright as mag 8. There are two GIFs which should aid in identifying the object when viewed with a telescope. The GIFs are in Library #4: SN1993J.GIF (file 2919) and SN1993KB.GIF (2927). The supernova forms a triangle with stars A and B at the southern end of the galaxy in the chart below. (The supernova is the asterisk *; is a fainter star.) (By the way, south is at the bottom of SN1993J.GIF, toward the top in SN1993JB.GIF.) The chart below was created by Michael Richmond at Princeton. When viewing this triangle, bear in mind that stars A and B in the chart are a few tens of thousands of light years from us; the supernova, on the other hand, is some 7 million light years distant! N -------------------------------------- | . G | | .... | | ..... | | .M81 F | | ..... E | | ... D | | A | | * | | C | | B | | | | | | | E | | W | | | | | | | X | | | | W | | Y | | Z | | | | | -------------------------------------- S ------------