http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n0504/08rebirth/

Old star's rebirth gives astronomers surprises
NATIONAL RADIO ASTRONOMY OBSERVATORY NEWS RELEASE
Posted: April 8, 2005

Astronomers using the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array (VLA) 
radio telescope are
taking advantage of a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to watch an old star 
suddenly stir back into
new activity after coming to the end of its normal life. Their surprising 
results have forced them
to change their ideas of how such an old, white dwarf star can re-ignite its 
nuclear furnace for one
final blast of energy. 

Computer simulations had predicted a series of events that would follow such a 
re-ignition of fusion
reactions, but the star didn't follow the script -- events moved 100 times more 
quickly than the
simulations predicted. 

"We've now produced a new theoretical model of how this process works, and the 
VLA observations have
provided the first evidence supporting our new model," said Albert Zijlstra, of 
the University of
Manchester in the United Kingdom. Zijlstra and his colleagues presented their 
findings in the April
8 issue of the journal Science. 

The astronomers studied a star known as V4334 Sgr, in the constellation 
Sagittarius. It is better
known as "Sakurai's Object," after Japanese amateur astronomer Yukio Sakurai, 
who discovered it on
February 20, 1996, when it suddenly burst into new brightness. At first, 
astronomers thought the
outburst was a common nova explosion, but further study showed that Sakurai's 
Object was anything
but common. 

The star is an old white dwarf that had run out of hydrogen fuel for nuclear 
fusion reactions in its
core. Astronomers believe that some such stars can undergo a final burst of 
fusion in a shell of
helium that surrounds a core of heavier nuclei such as carbon and oxygen. 
However, the outburst of
Sakurai's Object is the first such blast seen in modern times. Stellar 
outbursts observed in 1670
and 1918 may have been caused by the same phenomenon. 

Astronomers expect the Sun to become a white dwarf in about five billion years. 
A white dwarf is a
dense core left after a star's normal, fusion-powered life has ended. A 
teaspoon of white dwarf
material would weigh about 10 tons. White dwarfs can have masses up to 1.4 
times that of the Sun;
larger stars collapse at the end of their lives into even-denser neutron stars 
or black holes. 

Computer simulations indicated that heat-spurred convection (or "boiling") 
would bring hydrogen from
the star's outer envelope down into the helium shell, driving a brief flash of 
new nuclear fusion.
This would cause a sudden increase in brightness. The original computer models 
suggested a sequence
of observable events that would occur over a few hundred years. 

"Sakurai's object went through the first phases of this sequence in just a few 
years -- 100 times
faster than we expected -- so we had to revise our models," Zijlstra said. 

The revised models predicted that the star should rapidly reheat and begin to 
ionize gases in its
surrounding region. "This is what we now see in our latest VLA observations," 
Zijlstra said. 

"It's important to understand this process. Sakurai's Object has ejected a 
large amount of the
carbon from its innner core into space, both in the form of gas and dust 
grains. These will find
their way into regions of space where new stars form, and the dust grains may 
become incorporated in
new planets. Some carbon grains found in a meteorite show isotope ratios 
identical to those found in
Sakurai's Object, and we think they may have come from such an event. Our 
results suggest this
source for cosmic carbon may be far more important than we suspected before," 
Zijlstra added. 

The scientists continue to observe Sakurai's Object to take advantage of the 
rare opportunity to
learn about the process of re-ignition. They are making new VLA observations 
just this month. Their
new models predict that the star will heat very quickly, then slowly cool 
again, cooling back to its
current temperature about the year 2200. They think there will be one more 
reheating episode before
it starts its final cooling to a stellar cinder. 

Zijlstra worked with Marcin Hajduk of the University of Manchester and Nikolaus 
Copernicus
University, Torun, Poland; Falk Herwig of Los Alamos National Laboratory; Peter 
A.M. van Hoof of
Queen's University in Belfast and the Royal Observatory of Belgium; Florian 
Kerber of the European
Southern Observatory in Germany; Stefan Kimeswenger of the University of 
Innsbruck, Austria; Don
Pollacco of Queen's University in Belfast; Aneurin Evans of Keele University in 
Staffordshire, UK;
Jose Lopez of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Ensenada; Myfanwe 
Bryce of Jodrell
Bank Observatory in the UK; Stewart P.S. Eyres of the University of Central 
Lancashire in the UK;
and Mikako Matsuura of the University of Manchester. 

The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science 
Foundation, operated
under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc. 

______________________________________________
Meteorite-list mailing list
[email protected]
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to