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Superbursts were discovered at the beginning of this millennium. Just like type-I X-ray bursts, they are thought to be due to thermonuclear shell flashes on neutron stars, only igniting much deeper. With respect to type-I bursts, they last 10$^3$ times longer, are 10$^3$ as rare, ignite 10$^3$ times deeper (in column depth) and are thought to be fueled by carbon instead of hydrogen and helium. Observationally, they are sometimes hard to distinguish from intermediate duration bursts which are due to pure helium flashes on cold neutron stars. So far, 26 superbursts have been detected from 15 neutron stars in low-mass X-ray binaries that also exhibit type-I bursts. They are very difficult to catch and only 2 have been measured with highly sensitive instrumentation. Superbursts are sensitive probes of the neutron star crust and the accretion disk. The superburst phenomenon is not fully understood. Questions remain about the nature of the fuel, the collection of that fuel and the ignition conditions. The current state of affairs is reviewed and possible resolutions that lay ahead in the future discussed.
The past decade and a half has seen many interesting new developments in X-ray burst research, both observationally and theoretically. New phenomena were discovered, such as burst oscillations and superbursts, and new regimes of thermonuclear burning
We calculate the thermal and dynamical evolution of the surface layers of an accreting neutron star during the rise of a superburst. For the first few hours following unstable 12C ignition, the nuclear energy release is transported by convection. How
The SKA will discover tens of thousands of pulsars and provide unprecedented data quality on these, as well as the currently known population, due to its unrivalled sensitivity. Here, we outline the state of the art of our understanding of magnetosph
We present DES14X2fna, a high-luminosity, fast-declining type IIb supernova (SN IIb) at redshift $z=0.0453$, detected by the Dark Energy Survey (DES). DES14X2fna is an unusual member of its class, with a light curve showing a broad, luminous peak rea
The strong degeneracy of the 12C ignition layer on an accreting neutron star results in a hydrodynamic thermonuclear runaway, in which the nuclear heating time becomes shorter than the local dynamical time. We model the resulting combustion wave duri