Blaze Star: How To Prepare For The Biggest Sky Event For 79 Years [View all]
By Jamie Carter Senior Contributor. Jamie Carter is an award-winning reporter who covers the night sky.
Mar 27, 2025, 05:00am EDT

An artist's rendering of T Coronae Borealis, also known as T CrB, a recurrent nova in the constellation Corona Borealis. It is a binary system composed of a red giant star and a white dwarf star, surrounded by an accretion disc, and has outbursts approximately every 80 years
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Are you ready for the Blaze Star to erupt? When T Coronae Borealis (T CrB) a dim star in the constellation Coronoa Borealis goes nova and becomes visible to the naked eye for a few weeks, it will be all over the media. Youll read terrible headlines like New star lights-up night sky written by desk-bound reporters who know nothing about stargazing. Almost everyone on the planet will be taking a peek and mostly getting completely lost and confused.
However, if you get organized, do a little homework, and most importantly get outside and look up soon, youll be in with a chance of getting much more from a true once-in-a-lifetime celestial event. You can be among the few who can say you saw, appreciated, and understood how lucky you were to witness such a rare event.
Heres everything you need to know to prepare for the Blaze Star/T Coronae Borealis/T CrB to go nova:
What Is The Blaze Star/T Coronae Borealis/T CrB?
Nicknamed the Blaze Star, T Coronae Borealis (T CrB) is a binary system a star system like the solar system, but with two stars in which one explodes every 80 years. This is not uncommon. Binary stars explode all the time in cosmic time. Explosions could be multiple centuries apart, even more. In one average human lifetime, there is only one binary star system that does so, and thats the Blaze Star/T Coronae Borealis/T CrB.
It could explode as soon as Thursday, March 27, surging in brightness from very dim and invisible to the naked eye to bright enough to see. This is what astronomers call a nova a new star that results from a rare stellar eruption.
More:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamiecartereurope/2025/03/27/blaze-star-how-to-prepare-for-the-biggest-sky-event-for-79-years/
(Blaze Star should not be confused with the 1950's burlesque individual, Tempest Storm.)