Supernova - Wikipedia-style Article
                
                
                  Supernova
                  
                    Definition
                  
                  Supernova is a noun meaning a catastrophic stellar explosion that dramatically increases a star’s brightness for a short period, ejects most of its mass at high velocity, and forges heavy elements; by extension, it can refer to the star undergoing such an explosion or, figuratively, to someone/something that rises to intense prominence and fades quickly.
                  
                    Parts of Speech
                  
                  
                    - Noun (often used attributively: “supernova remnant”)
 
                  
                  
                    Pronunciation
                  
                  American English
                  
                    - IPA: /ˌsuːpərˈnoʊvə/
 
                    - Respelling: SOO-pər-NOH-və
 
                  
                  British English
                  
                    - IPA: /ˌsuːpəˈnəʊvə/
 
                    - Respelling: SOO-pə-NOH-və
 
                  
                  
                    Etymology
                  
                  Modern scientific Latin from super “above, beyond” + nova (stella) “new (star),” modelled on nova (a “new star”). The label supernova was popularized in early 20th-century astronomy to distinguish these far more energetic explosions from ordinary novae.
                  
                    Derivatives
                  
                  
                    - supernovae /suːpərˈnoʊviː/ (plural; also supernovas)
 
                    - supernova remnant (SNR) (noun) — the expanding shell of gas and dust left after the explosion
 
                    - supernova rate (noun phrase)
 
                    - supernoval (adjective; rare) — relating to a supernova
 
                  
                  
                    Synonyms
                  
                  
                    - stellar explosion
 
                    - stellar cataclysm
 
                    - starburst (loose/figurative; not the galaxy type)
 
                  
                  
                    Antonyms
                  
                  
                    - (No exact antonym) near-opposites: stellar quiescence, stable star, main-sequence phase
 
                  
                  
                    Usage
                  
                  Noun: “Astronomers confirmed a Type Ia supernova in a nearby spiral galaxy.” / “Heavy elements like iron are dispersed by supernovae into the interstellar medium.” / “The musician was a cultural supernova, dazzling and brief.”
                  
                    Related Terms
                  
                  
                    - Nova: A less-energetic brightening caused by a thermonuclear outburst on a white dwarf’s surface.
 
                    - Hypernova: Extremely energetic explosion, often linked to some gamma-ray bursts.
 
                    - Kilonova: Explosion from merging neutron stars, producing heavy r-process elements.
 
                    - Type Ia supernova: Thermonuclear disruption of a white dwarf (often via accretion/merger).
 
                    - Core-collapse supernova (Type II, Ib, Ic): Collapse of a massive star’s core after fuel exhaustion.
 
                    - Neutron star / Black hole: Compact remnants formed after some supernovae.
 
                    - Chandrasekhar limit: ~1.4 solar masses, critical for white-dwarf stability (Type Ia context).
 
                    - Light curve: The brightness-vs-time profile used to classify supernovae.
 
                    - Nucleosynthesis: Creation of new elements in stars and stellar explosions.
 
                  
                  
                    Detailed Definitions
                  
                  Noun
                  
                    - A catastrophic stellar explosion — a short-lived event (weeks to months) in which a star’s luminosity increases by millions to billions of times, ejecting material at thousands of km/s and enriching space with heavy elements.
                      
                        - Example: “The supernova outshone its entire host galaxy for several weeks.”
 
                      
                     
                    - Type Ia (thermonuclear) supernova — destruction of a carbon-oxygen white dwarf that reaches a critical mass or ignites via merger, producing a characteristic light curve used as a ‘standardizable candle’ in cosmology.
                      
                        - Example: “Observations of distant Type Ia supernovae revealed the accelerating universe.”
 
                      
                     
                    - Core-collapse supernova (Types II, Ib, Ic) — the implosion of an iron core in a massive star (>≈8 solar masses) followed by a powerful rebound/explosion; leaves a neutron star or black hole.
                      
                        - Example: “A Type II supernova was identified by its hydrogen lines and plateau light curve.”
 
                      
                     
                    - The star undergoing such an event — the progenitor at, or immediately before, the explosive phase.
                      
                        - Example: “Pre-explosion images helped identify the supernova’s red-supergiant progenitor.”
 
                      
                     
                    - Figurative: a person or thing marked by a sudden, brilliant rise and swift decline.
                      
                        - Example: “That startup was a supernova—blazing into view and fading within a year.”