STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Astronomers find white dwarf merger that may spawn future fiery explosion
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) May 21, 2019

Astronomers have discovered a rare celestial object. Scientists suggest the fiery orb was created when two dead white dwarfs merged and become reanimated.

According to a new paper describing the unusual stellar object, published this week in the journal Nature, the orb is a ticking time bomb -- likely to explode with a fiery bang in the near future.

Scientists first spotted the object while analyzing data collected by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, satellite. Astronomers spotted a bright star at the center of a gas nebula, but were surprised to find no visible light, only infrared radiation, emanating from the nebula.

When astronomers analyzed the spectrum emitted by the nebula and its central star, they determined the object contained neither hydrogen nor helium. The absence of hydrogen and helium is a defining characteristic of white dwarfs.

The sun and sun-like stars are powered by hydrogen fusion. When sun-like stars run out of hydrogen to burn, they burn helium, and when they run out of helium, they cool down and become white dwarfs. Unable to generate the temperatures to burn heavier elements, the stars die.

But for the pair of white dwarfs in the J005311 nebula, there is life after death.

"We assume that two white dwarfs formed there in close proximity many billions of years ago," Norbert Langer, a professor at the Argelander Institute for Astronomy at the University of Bonn in Germany, said in a news release. "They circled around each other, creating exotic distortions of space-time, called gravitational waves."

Eventually, the stars lost energy and their orbits inched closer and closer together. Finally, the pair merged. Miraculously, their merger gave the joined stars enough mass to burn heavier elements, granting the stellar object new life.

"Such an event is extremely rare," said Götz Gräfener, researcher at the Argelander Institute for Astronomy. "There are probably not even half a dozen such objects in the Milky Way, and we have discovered one of them."

Simulations showed the strong stellar winds measured around the unusual star can be explained by the object's fusion and rotating magnetic field. But as the white dwarfs that formed it once died, so too will the new object.

As it runs out of material, it will collapse under the weight of its tremendous mass and strong gravitational pull, and the star's final death will be marked by a large supernova explosion, researchers say.


Related Links
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
ALMA Discovers Aluminum Around Young Star
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) May 17, 2019
Researchers using ALMA data discovered an aluminum-bearing molecule for the first time around a young star. Aluminum rich inclusions found in meteorites are some of the oldest solid objects formed in the solar system, but their formation process and stage is still poorly linked to star and planet formation. The discovery of aluminum oxide around a young star provides a crucial chance to study the early formation process of meteorites and planets like the Earth. Young stars are surrounded by disks ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Washington says 'possible' Ankara will reject Russian missiles

Patriot system, transport ship sent to Middle East as Iran tensions rise

Lockheed Martin awarded $84.9 million Navy contract for AEGIS system development

State Department approves $2.7B Patriot system sale to UAE

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Turkey says to produce S-500s with Russia after S-400 missile deal

Boeing nabs $10.8M for Harpoon missile production for Saudi Arabia

F-35C jets to be armed with hypersonic cruise missiles

Raytheon to provide U.S. Marines with Naval Strike Force Missile

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Northrop Grumman awarded $163.6M to support Army's Hunter drone

Hummingbird robot uses AI to soon go where drones can't

Obstacles to overcome before operating fleets of drones becomes reality

Ascent AeroSystems Announces New Industrial Grade Drone and Launch Customer

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Next AEHF satellite shipped to Cape Canaveral for June launch

Airbus and Thales Alenia Space to build two SpainSAT NG satellites

Boeing awarded $605M for Air Force's 11th WGS comms satellite

SLAC develops novel compact antenna for communicating where radios fail

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Navy awards $22.7M to BAE for three 57mm MK 110 gun mounts

Expediting Software Certification for Military Systems, Platforms

With Insights from Integration Exercise, SubT Challenge Competitors Prepare for Tunnel Circuit

Marines to field enhanced handheld targeting system later this year

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Belgian leaders mull suspension of Saudi arms sales

Yemen arms inquiry poses threat to French press freedom: NGOs

France confirms contested arms shipment to Saudi Arabia

Shanahan: Trump chooses a business manager for defense chief

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Beijing denounces US warship sail-by in South China Sea

US navy chief does not want China tensions to 'boil over'

EU defends military reforms against US attack

US warns EU over 'poison pill' defence plans

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Monitoring the lifecycle of tiny catalyst nanoparticles

Fast and selective optical heating for functional nanomagnetic metamaterials

2D gold quantum dots are atomically tunable with nanotubes

Harnessing microorganisms for smart microsystems