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This is Scientific American 60-Second Space. I'm Clara Moskowitz. Got a minute?

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Not many people can boast of discovering a new celestial wonder, let alone doing so before puberty.

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But 10-year-old Nathan Gray of Nova Scotia has done just that:

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Gray is officially the youngest person ever to identify a new supernova.

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Gray, with the help of his father, used the local Abbey Ridge Observatory to spot the exploding star on October 30th.

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His find was confirmed as a bona-fide supernova last week by Italian astronomers.

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They took spectroscopic measurements that showed the newfound object had the wavelength signatures of a supernova.

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Supernovas happen when giant stars run out of fuel for nuclear fusion and collapse in on themselves.

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The resulting giant explosions are so bright they are visible from distant galaxies.

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Nathan Gray found his supernova in the constellation of Draco,

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where he noticed a new bright star that hadn't been there in older images.

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Nathan comes from a space-minded family.

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In fact, he stole his new title from his older sister, Kathryn Aurora Gray, who had held the record for youngest person to discover a supernova.

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Looks like the family has multiple young stars.

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Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Space. I'm Clara Moskowitz.

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