The night sky, adorned with countless stars, has served as a canvas for human imagination and storytelling for millennia. Across cultures, patterns of stars, known as constellations, have been linked to rich tapestries of mythology, helping ancient civilizations to understand the cosmos, track time, and pass down cultural narratives.
Superliminous supernovae are miraculous events. For astronomers, they also provide a vital tool for measuring cosmic distances and the rate at which the Universe is expanding. As part of the Cosmic Distance Ladder, these incredibly bright stellar explosions are the "standard candles" for objects billions of light-years away. In a rare event, researchers from the University of Munich, using the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) in Arizona, witnessed a superluminous supernova 10 billion light-years away that was far brighter than most explosions of its kind.

