Songs with Astronomical Themes No. 14: “Champagne Supernova,” by Oasis

I’m still sulking about the whole Comet ISON thing. Don’t even talk to me about ISON.

To help us get over that disappointment, here’s another favorite song with an astronomical theme, Oasis’s seven-minute-long, “Champagne Supernova,” from 1996. I know I’ve posted this before, but I figure no one’s keeping track.

Break out your tie-dye and enjoy.

Cat’s Eye Nebula

The Cat’s Eye Nebula, as photographed by the Hubble Telescope. Discovered in 1786, the Cat’s Eye Nebula lies 3,000 light years from Earth. Interestingly (for me anyway), the Cat’s Eye Nebula is only about 1000 years old (+/- 260 years).

Cat's Eye Nebula

A planetary nebula like this (which, confusingly, has nothing to do with planets) is a star near its last stage of life. A star begins as a cloud of molecular dust, settles into a main-sequence star like the Sun, expands to become a red giant, then contracts to a white dwarf, then dissipates as a planetary nebula, then explodes into a supernova. Somewhere in that sequence there are also red dwarfs and blue dwarfs.

You can see more amazing photos of deep space objects and such at NASA’s http://hubblesite.org/.

And here’s a trippy, catchy song about supernovas, by the band Oasis when they were still good: