What a blast!

Take a dense, collapsed star, set a helium-rich star in orbit around it, and you’ve got the

ingredients for a series of explosions, each lasting about 10 seconds and releasing as much

energy as the sun does in an entire year.

Such eruptions can happen several times a day on the surface of a neutron star—the superdense

cinder left behind when a massive star jettisons its outer layers and collapses.