There have been several recorded supernovae in the Milky Way. The earliest recorded Milky Way supernova was SN 185 (seen, as the name implies, in 185 C.E.), and the most recent supernova recorded was SN 1604 (seen in 1604 C.E.), or Kepler's Supernova.
In the Milky Way, a supernova occurs about once every 50 years.
The candy that is named after a supernova is the atomic fireball. Another is the starburst or the milky way.
A supernova is a star which has effectively exploded. There have been many in our galaxy which we call the Milky Way. There have also been supernovas in other galaxies too.
Nobody has been outside the Milky Way.
The solar system is in the milky way
Most planets that have been discovered are in the Milky Way
It was visible with the naked eye.It did not originate within the Milky Way.
The discovery of the Milky Way is credited to the ancient Greek philosopher Democritus, who was the first person in recorded history to make the assumption that the Milky Way existed and was made up of billions of distant stars.
Yes. There have been hundreds of planets discovered in other stars in the Milky Way. It has been estimated that the Milky Way likely contains hundreds of billions of planets.
No one named the Milky Way. It has been seen in the skies since people first looked.See related question for why it is called Milky Way
The Milky Way can be seen at night, when there is no interference from city lights. Since city lights have been around for only 100 years or so, the Milky Way has been known since antiquity.
It didn't. The Milky Way has been known since long before the Hubble telescope was created. The spiral arm we call the Milky Way has been known since ancient times.