Monday, February 09, 2015

Twin stars found at nebula's heart....Doomed to destroy each other

illustration of binary star exploding
The pair of stars will fuse and explode, as imagined here by an illustrator, in about 700 million years


At the centre of a mysterious nebula, astronomers have discovered two stars locked in such a tight orbit that they will eventually merge and explode. Both stars are white dwarfs - the heaviest such pair ever discovered.
To reignite and explode into a supernova, a white dwarf must gain mass, either by grabbing matter from a partner star, or by fusing with it (if the partner is also a white dwarf). This is the first recorded example of a system headed for that kind of merger.
The presence of two stars also explains the odd shape of the surrounding nebula, called Henize 2-428 - a cloud of gas thrown into space when the stars first died and became white dwarfs.

The discovery was made using the Very Large Telescope high in Chile's Atacama Desert, along with telescopes in the Canary Islands and South Africa.
Dr Henri Boffin, one of the paper's authors, is an astronomer working for the European Southern Observatory (ESO) which operates the facility in Chile. He said: "When we looked at this object's central star with ESO's Very Large Telescope, we found not just one but a pair of stars at the heart of this strangely lopsided, glowing cloud."
That was the original purpose of the study: to explain the striking, irregular shapes formed by so-called "planetary nebulae".

Planetary nebula Henize 2-428
The odd shape of the nebula can be explained by the "double-degenerate" pair of stars at its core

Using extra observations of Henize 2-428 from other telescopes, Dr Boffin and his colleagues established the mass and the separation of the two stars they had discovered - and realized they were looking at something entirely unique.
Each of the white dwarfs is nearly as heavy as our own sun and they orbit each other in 4.2 hours. This means that they are destined, based on Einstein's general relativity, to spiral closer together, losing energy as gravitational waves, and ultimately fusing into a single star - with a mass almost 1.8 times that of the Sun.
That mass is significant because it is bigger than the "Chandrasekhar limit", a boundary named after the Nobel-winning astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar. Any white dwarf heavier than this limit (about 1.4 solar masses) will not simply continue cooling down. Instead, the carbon at its core is compressed so much that nuclear fusion kick-starts again - ultimately causing the dwarf to explode into a supernova.

Very Large Telescope
Astronomers zoomed in on the nebula using the Very Large Telescope in Chile

The authors of the new study argue that this supernova, expected in 700 million years, will be of "type Ia". This means a runaway nuclear fusion reaction, like a vast hydrogen bomb but fuelled by carbon, which eventually blows the star to bits.
"Until now, the formation of supernovae Type Ia by the merging of two white dwarfs was purely theoretical," said Dr David Jones, a research fellow at ESO and another of the report's authors. "The pair of stars in Henize 2-428 is the real thing!"
Even at a distance of some 4,000 light years, this type of supernova would be bright enough to be seen from Earth in broad daylight.
"There's a big debate going on in the community - whether the merger of two massive white dwarfs produces a type Ia or a core-collapse supernova," Dr Podsiadlowski said.
"Both of them are interesting!"

"What it does tell us is that these massive white dwarf binaries actually exist - even though they were theoretically predicted, that actually hadn't been confirmed."

planetary nebula 
The team had planned simply to study the shapes of planetary nebulae, like the dramatic Cat's Eye Nebula

2 comments:

  1. Jonny and Chris8:08:00 PM

    Aunt Jeannie ,Daddy stoo at the hotel to check on the people in the office human resources , chris and I walked to SCI Port to check on what we was studying , Sha and Jenny and Man and Sheryl and Bubba went with daddy . Mama say daddy need some back up if they start to beat his musty butt , mama is funny and bad .
    This is what we are going to have to see what we can find out and you gave a place to start , one place we found said it would take place in about 700 million years . mama said well that won't matter because the stupid people will destroy the earth before then .
    We thank you aunt Jeannie and send you all our love from the cubs .
    Wrote by Jonny

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  2. Dear Jonny and Chris,
    I am so happy my post was helpful. This is the first time they have actually seen binary massive white dwarfs.Yes, 700 hundred million years is the estimate. We won't be around to see it.
    I think Daddy really enjoys it when you guys come to work with him but no one will ever beat his musty butt except your mama. She always says she is going to do it.... she hasn't done it yet.
    She's right, you know, stupid people are wrecking the earth....but the sun will do it anyway in about ten billion years.
    Lots of love back at'cha my cubs,
    Aunt Jeannie

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