(04-09-2025, 07:18 PM)poetry_zealot Wrote: once we believed the stars
were radiant balls of light—
not relics,
just ghosts.
we named them
like children
we could never raise
and let them burn
but they never did—
they only died
(quietly),
millions of years away:
their silence gradually
mistaken for warmth.
now,
the sky is full
of things
that don't dare to burn—
light still arriving,
long after
it mattered.
The central premise of this poem is so completely incorrect, that I can't enjoy any of the actual poem.
Virtually none of the stars we can observe with the naked eye are dead.
There are 52 star deaths in the milky way each century: https://www.astronomy.com/science/how-many-stars-die-in-the-milky-way-each-year/
There are 100 billion stars in the milky way: https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Herschel/How_many_stars_are_there_in_the_Universe
The naked eye can see about 3000 stars.
>>Therefore, the expected number of stars that die in a year out of our 3,000 visible candidates is 0.52*3000/10^11 = 0.156 ppb
The most distant visible star to the human eye - and I had to google this one - is V762 Cas. That is 16k light years away.
>>Even if we assume that all of the stars we can see are 16000 years away and could have died in the intervening 16,000 years between when their light left them and when it reached us, the expected number of dead stars that we would be observing in the night sky with the naked eye would be 16k*0.156 ppb = 0.0002469
In other words, virtually none of the stars we can see with the naked eye are already dead.