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Scientists have just discovered a ‘remarkable’, almost perfect sphere in space

Scientists have found a new, almost perfectly spherical object in space, prompting new questions about supernovas.

The object, nicknamed Teleios “due to its symmetry” (it’s taken from the Greek word for ‘perfect’), was picked up on the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) telescope, with details published in Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia earlier this month.

The research paper from the study team, which lists Miroslav Filipovic of Western Sydney University as its lead author, reads: “Teleios is exclusively seen at radio-continuum frequencies. Interestingly, Teleios is not only almost perfectly symmetric, but it also has one of the lowest surface brightnesses discovered among Galactic SNRs.”

Galactic SNRs are galactic supernova remnants, by the way – basically, remains ejected during the explosion of a star.

Filipovic shared more information about Teleios in an article for The Conversationback in March, when he wrote: “This unique object has never been seen in any wavelength, including visible light, demonstrating ASKAP’s incredible ability to discover new objects.

“The shape indicates Teleios has remained relatively untouched by its environment. This presents us with an opportunity to make inferences about the initial supernova explosion, providing rare insight into one of the most energetic events in the universe.”

Pretty cool, huh?

And it’s not the only interesting discovery made by scientists recently, with academics also finding mysterious giant structures beneath the surface of Mars and that Earth’s earliest oceans weren’t actually blue.

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