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In
the shock region where the supersonic stellar winds of the two stars
collide, subatomic particles are accelerated to such an extent that they
produce very high-energy gamma radiation. Illustration: DESY, Science
Communication Lab.Download [6.2 MB, 3840 x 2160]
Very
high-energy (VHE) gamma radiation from Eta Carinae could be detected
with H.E.S.S. around the time of the next encounter of the two giant
stars. Illustration: DESY, Science Communication Lab.Download [6.5 MB, 3840 x 2160]
Specialised telescope provides evidence of very high-energy gamma radiation from Eta Carinae
With a specialised telescope in Namibia a DESY-led team of researchers has proven a certain type of binary star as a new kind of source for very high-energy cosmic gamma-radiation. Eta Carinae is located 7500 lightyears away in the constellation Carina (the ship’s keel) in the Southern Sky and, based on the data collected, emits gamma rays with energies all the way up to 400 gigaelectronvolts (GeV), some 100 billion times more than the energy of visible light. The team headed by DESY’s Stefan Ohm, Eva Leser and Matthias Füßling is presenting its findings, made at the gamma-ray observatory High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.), in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics. A specially created multimedia animation explains the phenomenon. “With such visualizations we want to make the fascination of research tangible,” emphasises DESY's Director of Astroparticle Physics, Christian Stegmann.
Eta Carinae is a binary system of superlatives, consisting of two blue giants, one about 100 times, the other about 30 times the mass of our sun. The two stars orbit each other every 5.5 years in very eccentric elliptical orbits, their separation varying approximately between the distance from our Sun to Mars and from the Sun to Uranus. Both these gigantic stars fling dense, supersonic stellar winds of charged particles out into space. In the process, the larger of the two loses a mass equivalent to our entire Sun in just 5000 years or so. The smaller one produces a fast stellar wind travelling at speeds around eleven million kilometres per hour (about one percent of the speed of light).
A huge shock front is formed in the region where these two stellar winds collide, heating up the material in the wind to extremely high temperatures. At around 50 million degrees Celsius, this matter radiates brightly in the X-ray range. The particles in the stellar wind are not hot enough to emit gamma radiation, though. “However, shock regions like this are typically sites where subatomic particles are accelerated by strong prevailing electromagnetic fields,” explains Ohm, who is the head of the H.E.S.S. group at DESY. When particles are accelerated this rapidly, they can also emit gamma radiation. In fact, the satellites “Fermi”, operated by the US space agency NASA, and AGILE, belonging to the Italian space agency ASI, already detected high-energy gamma rays of up to about 10 GeV coming from Eta Carinae in 2009.
Subatomic hailstorm
“Different models have been proposed to explain how this gamma radiation is produced,” Füßling reports. “It could be generated by accelerated electrons or by high-energy atomic nuclei.” Determining which of these two scenarios is correct is crucial: very energetic atomic nuclei account for the bulk of the so-called Cosmic Rays, a subatomic cosmic hailstorm striking Earth constantly from all directions. Despite intense research for more than 100 years, the sources of the Cosmic Rays are still not exhaustively known. Since the electrically charged atomic nuclei are deflected by cosmic magnetic fields as they travel through the universe, the direction from which they arrive at Earth no longer points back to their origin. Cosmic gamma rays, on the other hand, are not deflected. So, if the gamma rays emitted by a specific source can be shown to originate from high-energy atomic nuclei, one of the long-sought accelerators of cosmic particle radiation will have been identified.
“In the case of Eta Carinae, electrons have a particularly hard time getting accelerated to high energies, because they are constantly being deflected by magnetic fields during their acceleration, which makes them lose energy again,” says Leser. “Very high-energy gamma radiation begins above the 100 GeV range, which is rather difficult to explain in Eta Carinae to stem from electron acceleration.” The satellite data already indicated that Eta Carinae also emits gamma radiation beyond 100 GeV, and H.E.S.S. has now succeeded in detecting such radiation up to energies of 400 GeV around the time of the close encounter of the two blue giants in 2014 and 2015. This makes the binary star the first known example of a source in which very high-energy gamma radiation is generated by colliding stellar winds.
“The analysis of the gamma radiation measurements taken by H.E.S.S. and the satellites shows that the radiation can best be interpreted as the product of rapidly accelerated atomic nuclei,” says DESY’s PhD student Ruslan Konno, who has published a companion study, together with scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg. “This would make the shock regions of colliding stellar winds a new type of natural particle accelerator for cosmic rays.” With H.E.S.S., which is named after the discoverer of Cosmic Rays, Victor Franz Hess, and the upcoming Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA), the next-generation gamma-ray observatory currently being built in the Chilean highlands, the scientists hope to investigate this phenomenon in greater detail and discover more sources of this kind.
Cosmic roadtrip
Thanks to detailed observations of Eta Carinae at all wavelengths, the properties of the stars, their orbits and stellar winds have been determined relatively accurately. This has given astrophysicists a better picture of the binary star system and its history. To illustrate the new observations of Eta Carinae, the DESY astrophysicists have produced a video animation together with the animation specialists of the award-winning Science Communication Lab. The computer-generated images are close to reality because the measured orbital, stellar and wind parameters were used for this purpose. The internationally acclaimed multimedia artist Carsten Nicolai, who uses the pseudonym Alva Noto for his musical works, created the sound for the animation.
“I find science and scientific research extremely important,” says Nicolai, who sees close parallels in the creative work of artists and scientists. For him, the appeal of this work also lay in the artistic mediation of scientific research results: “particularly the fact that it is not a film soundtrack, but has a genuine reference to reality,” emphasizes the musician and artist. Together with the exclusively composed sound, this unique collaboration of scientists, animation artists and musician has resulted in a multimedia work that takes viewers on an extraordinary journey to a superlative double star some 7500 light years away.
Animation: DESY, Science Communication Lab; Sound by Alva Noto.. The animation is available in UHD and without annotations to media. Please
contact the DESY press office atpresse@desy.de
Detection of very-high-energy γ-ray
emission from the colliding wind binary η Car with H.E.S.S.; H.E.S.S.
Collaboration (for DESY: Matthias Füßling, Eva Leser, Stefan Ohm); Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2020; DOI:10.1051/0004-6361/201936761
Gamma-ray
and X-ray constraints on non-thermal processes in η Carinae; R. White,
M.Breuhaus, R. Konno, S. Ohm, B. Reville, and J.A. Hinton; Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2020; DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201937031
Artists impression of the disk of dust and gas surrounding the massive
protostar MM 1a, with its companion MM 1b forming in the outer regions.
Credit: J. D. Ilee / University of Leeds.
Observation of the dust emission (green) and the cool gas around MM1a
(red is receding gas, blue is approaching gas), indicating that the
outflow cavity rotates in the same sense as the central accretion disc.
MM1b is seen orbiting in the lower left. Credit: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO);
J. D. Ilee / University of Leeds.
Observation of the dust emission (green) and hot gas rotating in the
disc around MM 1a (red is receding gas, blue is approaching gas). MM 1b
is seen the lower left. Credit: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO); J. D. Ilee /
University of Leeds.
Astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array
(ALMA) have discovered that two young stars forming from the same
swirling protoplanetary disk may be twins — in the sense that they came
from the same parent cloud of star-forming material. Beyond that,
however, they have shockingly little in common.
The main, central star of this system, which is located approximately
11,000 light-years from Earth, is truly colossal — a full 40 times more
massive than the Sun. The other star, which ALMA recently discovered
just beyond the central star’s disk, is a relatively puny one-eightieth
(1/80) that mass.
Their striking difference in size suggests that they formed by
following two very different paths. The more massive star took the more
traditional route by collapsing under gravity out of a dense “core” of
gas. The smaller one likely followed the road less traveled by – at
least for stars – by accumulating mass from a portion of the disk that
“fragmented” away as it matured, a process that may have more in common
with the birth of gas-giant planets.
“Astronomers have known for a long time that most massive stars orbit
one or more other stars as partners in a compact system, but how they
got there has been a topic of conjecture,” said Crystal Brogan, an
astronomer with the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) in
Charlottesville, Virginia, and a co-author on the study. “With ALMA, we
now have evidence that the disk of gas and dust that encompasses and
feeds a growing massive star also produces fragments at early stages
that can form a secondary star.”
The main object, known as MM 1a, is a previously identified young
massive star surrounded by a rotating disk of gas and dust. A faint
protostellar companion to this object, MM 1b, was newly detected by ALMA
just outside the MM 1a protoplanetary disk. The team believes this is
one of the first examples of a fragmented disk to be detected around a
massive young star.
“This ALMA observation opens new questions, such as ‘Does the
secondary star also have a disk?’ and ‘How fast can the secondary star
grow?’ The amazing thing about ALMA is that we have not yet used its
full capabilities in this area, which will someday allow us to answer
these new questions,” said co-author Todd Hunter, who is also with the
NRAO in Charlottesville.
Stars form within large clouds of gas and dust in interstellar space.
When these clouds collapse under gravity, they begin to rotate faster,
forming a disk around them.
“In low-mass stars like our Sun, it is in these disks that planets
can form,” said John Ilee, an astronomer at Leeds University in England
and lead author on the study. “In this case, the star and disk we have
observed are so massive that, rather than witnessing a planet forming in
the disk, we are seeing another star being born.”
By observing the millimeter wavelength light naturally emitted by the
dust, and subtle shifts in the frequency of light emitted by the gas,
the researchers were able to calculate the mass of MM 1a and MM 1b.
Their work is published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
“Many older massive stars are found with nearby companions,” added
Ilee. “But binary stars are often very equal in mass, and so likely
formed together as siblings. Finding a young binary system with a mass
ratio of 80-to-1 is very unusual and suggests an entirely different
formation process for both objects.”
The favored formation process for MM 1b occurs in the outer regions
of cold, massive disks. These “gravitationally unstable” disks are
unable to hold themselves up against the pull of their own gravity,
collapsing into one – or more – fragments.
The researchers note that newly discovered young star MM 1b could
also be surrounded by its own circumstellar disk, which may have the
potential to form planets of its own – but it will need to be quick.
“Stars as massive as MM 1a only live for around a million years before
exploding as powerful supernovae, so while MM 1b may have the potential
to form its own planetary system in the future, it won’t be around for
long,” Ilee concluded.
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an
international astronomy facility, is a partnership of the European
Southern Observatory (ESO), the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF)
and the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan in
cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA is funded by ESO on behalf
of its Member States, by NSF in cooperation with the National Research
Council of Canada (NRC) and the Ministry of Science and Technology
(MOST) in Taiwan and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica
(AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute
(KASI).
ALMA construction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its
Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO),
managed by Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI), on behalf of North
America; and by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) on
behalf of East Asia. The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the
unified leadership and management of the construction, commissioning and
operation of ALMA.
Contacts Nicolás Lira Education and Public Outreach Coordinator Joint ALMA Observatory, Santiago - Chile Phone: +56 2 2467 6519 Cell phone: +56 9 9445 7726 Email:nicolas.lira@alma.cl
Charles E. Blue Public Information Officer National Radio Astronomy Observatory Charlottesville, Virginia - USA Phone: +1 434 296 0314 Cell phone: +1 202 236 6324 Email:cblue@nrao.edu
Calum Turner ESO Assistant Public Information Officer Garching bei München, Germany Phone: +49 89 3200 6670 Email:calum.turner@eso.org
Masaaki Hiramatsu Education and Public Outreach Officer, NAOJ Chile Observatory , Tokyo - Japan Phone: +81 422 34 3630
ESO’s R Aquarii Week continues with the sharpest R Aquarii image ever
While testing a new subsystem on the
SPHERE planet-hunting instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope,
astronomers were able to capture dramatic details of the turbulent
stellar relationship in the binary star R Aquarii with unprecedented
clarity — even compared to observations from Hubble.
This spectacular image — the second instalment in ESO’s R Aquarii Week — shows intimate details of the dramatic stellar duo making up the binary starR Aquarii.
Though most binary stars are bound in a graceful waltz by gravity, the
relationship between the stars of R Aquarii is far less serene. Despite
its diminutive size, the smaller of the two stars in this pair is
steadily stripping material from its dying companion — a red giant.
Years of observation have uncovered the peculiar story
behind the binary star R Aquarii, visible at the heart of this image.
The larger of the two stars, the red giant, is a type of star known as a
Mira variable.
At the end of their life, these stars start to pulsate, becoming 1000
times as bright as the Sun as their outer envelopes expand and are cast
into the interstellar void.
The death throes of this vast star are already dramatic, but the influence of the companion white dwarf
star transforms this intriguing astronomical situation into a sinister
cosmic spectacle. The white dwarf — which is smaller, denser and much
hotter than the red giant — is flaying material from the outer layers of
its larger companion. The jets of stellar material cast off by this
dying giant and white dwarf pair can be seen here spewing outwards from R
Aquarii.
<
Occasionally, enough material collects on the surface of the white dwarf to trigger a thermonuclear nova explosion,
a titanic event which throws a vast amount of material into space. The
remnants of past nova events can be seen in the tenuous nebula of gas
radiating from R Aquarii in this image.
<
R Aquarii lies only 650 light-years from Earth — a near neighbour in astronomical terms — and is one of the closest symbiotic binary stars
to Earth. As such, this intriguing binary has received particular
attention from astronomers for decades. Capturing an image of the myriad
features of R Aquarii was a perfect way for astronomers to test the
capabilities of the Zurich IMaging POLarimeter (ZIMPOL), a component on
board the planet-hunting instrument SPHERE. The results exceeded observations from space — the image shown here is even sharper than observations from the famous NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope.
<
SPHERE was developed over years of studies and construction to focus
on one of the most challenging and exciting areas of astronomy: the
search for exoplanets. By using a state-of-the-art adaptive optics system and specialised instruments such as ZIMPOL, SPHERE can achieve the challenging feat of directly imaging
exoplanets. However, SPHERE’s capabilities are not limited to hunting
for elusive exoplanets. The instrument can also be used to study a
variety of astronomical sources — as can be seen from this spellbinding
image of the stellar peculiarities of R Aquarii.
More Information
This research was presented in the paper “SPHERE / ZIMPOL
observations of the symbiotic system R Aqr. I. Imaging of the stellar
binary and the innermost jet clouds” by H.M. Schmid et. al, which was
published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
The team was composed of H. M. Schmid (ETH Zurich,
Institute for Astronomy, Switzerland), A. Bazzon (ETH Zurich, Institute
for Astronomy, Switzerland), J. Milli (European Southern Observatory),
R. Roelfsema (NOVA Optical Infrared Instrumentation Group at ASTRON, the
Netherlands), N. Engler (ETH Zurich, Institute for Astronomy,
Switzerland) , D. Mouillet (Université Grenoble Alpes and CNRS, France),
E. Lagadec (Université Côte d’Azur, France), E. Sissa (INAF and
Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia “G. Galilei” Universitá di Padova,
Italy), J.-F. Sauvage (Aix Marseille Univ, France), C. Ginski (Leiden
Observatory and Anton Pannekoek Astronomical Institute, the
Netherlands), A. Baruffolo (INAF), J.L. Beuzit (Université Grenoble
Alpes and CNRS, France), A. Boccaletti (LESIA, Observatoire de Paris,
France), A. J. Bohn (ETH Zurich, Institute for Astronomy, Switzerland),
R. Claudi (INAF, Italy), A. Costille (Aix Marseille Univ, France), S.
Desidera (INAF, Italy), K. Dohlen (Aix Marseille Univ, France), C.
Dominik (Anton Pannekoek Astronomical Institute, the Netherlands), M.
Feldt (Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Germany), T. Fusco (ONERA,
France), D. Gisler (Kiepenheuer-Institut für Sonnenphysik, Germany),
J.H. Girard (European Southern Observatory), R. Gratton (INAF, Italy),
T. Henning (Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Germany), N. Hubin
(European Southern Observatory), F. Joos (ETH Zurich, Institute for
Astronomy, Switzerland), M. Kasper (European Southern Observatory), M.
Langlois (Centre de Recherche Astrophysique de Lyon and Aix Marseille
Univ, France), A. Pavlov (Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Germany),
J. Pragt (NOVA Optical Infrared Instrumentation Group at ASTRON, the
Netherlands), P. Puget (Université Grenoble Alpes, France), S.P. Quanz
(ETH Zurich, Institute for Astronomy, Switzerland), B. Salasnich (INAF,
Italy), R. Siebenmorgen (European Southern Observatory), M. Stute
(Simcorp GmbH, Germany), M. Suarez (European Southern Observatory), J.
Szulagyi (ETH Zurich, Institute for Astronomy, Switzerland), C. Thalmann
(ETH Zurich, Institute for Astronomy, Switzerland), M. Turatto (INAF,
Italy), S. Udry (Geneva Observatory, Switzerland), A. Vigan (Aix
Marseille Univ, France), and F. Wildi (Geneva Observatory, Switzerland).
ESO is the foremost intergovernmental astronomy
organisation in Europe and the world’s most productive ground-based
astronomical observatory by far. It has 16 Member States: Austria,
Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Ireland,
Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland
and the United Kingdom, along with the host state of Chile and with
Australia as a Strategic Partner. ESO carries out an ambitious programme
focused on the design, construction and operation of powerful
ground-based observing facilities enabling astronomers to make important
scientific discoveries. ESO also plays a leading role in promoting and
organising cooperation in astronomical research. ESO operates three
unique world-class observing sites in Chile: La Silla, Paranal and
Chajnantor. At Paranal, ESO operates the Very Large Telescope and its
world-leading Very Large Telescope Interferometer as well as two survey
telescopes, VISTA working in the infrared and the visible-light VLT
Survey Telescope. ESO is also a major partner in two facilities on
Chajnantor, APEX and ALMA, the largest astronomical project in
existence. And on Cerro Armazones, close to Paranal, ESO is building the
39-metre Extremely Large Telescope, the ELT, which will become “the
world’s biggest eye on the sky”.
An infrared image of the binary CS Cha
with the newly discovered companion in the dotted circle. After a mouse
click you can see the image viewed with special polarization filters
that make dust discs and exoplanets visible. The companion seems to have
his own dust disc.
(c) C. Ginski & SPHERE
An
international team of astronomers headed by Dutch researchers from
Leiden University has coincidently found a small companion around the
young double star CS Cha. The astronomers examined the dust disc of the
binary, while they stumbled upon the companion. The researchers suspect
that it is a planet in his toddler years that is still growing. The
astronomers used the SPHERE instrument on the European Very Large
Telescope in Chile. They will soon publish their findings in an article
that is accepted by the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
The binary star CS Cha and his special companion are located some six
hundred light years away from Earth in a star formation area in the
southern constellation Chameleon. The double star is just two to three
million years young. The researchers wanted to study the star to search
for a dust disc and for planets in the making.
During their
research on the binary star, the astronomers saw a small dot on the edge
of their images. The researchers dived into the telescope archives and
discovered the dot, but much fainter, also on 19 year old photographs
taken with the Hubble Space Telescope and on 11 year old photographs of
the Very Large Telescope. Thanks to the old photographs, the astronomers
were able to show that the companion moves with the binary and that
they belong together.
What the
companion looks like and how it was formed is unclear. The researchers
tried to fit various models on the observations, but they do not give a
hundred percent certainty. The companion may be a small brown dwarf
star, but it can also be a big super-Jupiter.
Lead author Christian Ginski
(Leiden Observatory, Leiden University) explains: "The most exciting
part is that the light of the companion is highly polarized. Such a
preference in the direction of polarization usually occurs when light is
scattered along the way. We suspect that the companion is surrounded by
his own dust disc. The tricky part is that the disc blocks a large part
of the light and that is why we can hardly determine the mass of the
companion. So it could be a brown dwarf but also a super-Jupiter in his
toddler years. The classical planet-forming-models can't help us."
Infographic of the binary star CS Cha and
its surrounding dust disc (left) with the newly discovered companion
(right). The companion is located at more than 214 times the distance
earth-sun fromthe binary, but clearly belongs to the system. The whole
system is about 165 parsec (538 light years) away from Earth.(c) C. Ginski/G.A. Muro Arena
In the future, the researchers want to examine the star and the
companion in more detail. They want to use the international ALMA
telescope on the Chajnantor plateau in the North Chilean Andes.
SPHERE
SPHERE is the abbreviation of Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast
Exoplanet REsearch instrument. It is a powerful planet hunter that is
attached to the European Very Large Telescope at Cerro Paranal in
northern Chile. The instrument has partly been developed in the
Netherlands. SPHERE can make direct images of exoplanets and dust discs
around stars. The instrument bypasses the bright star and looks
specifically at polarized light that is reflected by the atmosphere of
an exoplanet or the dust disc around a star.
Reference:
"First direct detection of a polarized companion outside of a resolved
circumbinary disk around CS Cha*", C. Ginski (1, 2), M. Benisty (3, 4),
R.G. van Holstein (1), A. Juhász (5), T.O.B. Schmidt (6), G. Chauvin (3,
4) , J. de Boer (1), M. Wilby (1), C.F. Manara (7), P. Delorme (4), F.
Ménard (4), P. Pinilla (8), T. Birnstiel (9), M. Flock(10), C. Keller
(1), M. Kenworthy (1), J. Milli (4, 11), J. Olofsson (12, 13), L. Pérez
(14), F. Snik (1), en N. Vogt (12). 1. Universiteit Leiden; 2.
Universiteit van Amsterdam; 3 en 14. Universidad de Chile (Chili); 4.
Univ. Grenoble Alpes (Frankrijk); 5. University of Cambridge (Verenigd
Koninkrijk); 6. Sorbonne Paris Cité (Frankrijk); 7 ESA/ESTEC, Noordwijk;
8. The University of Arizona (Verenigde Staten); 9.
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (Duitsland); 10.
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie (Duitsland); 11. European Southern
Observatory (Chili); 12 en 13. Universidad de Valparaíso (Chili), 2018,
accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. (free preprint)
An artist’s impressionof the newly discovered exoplanet around the binary star KIC 5095269. Credit: USQ Media Design.
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, Luke Skywalker lived on a planet circling twin suns.
While Star Wars is science-fiction, two stars in orbit of each other is firmly based in reality.
An astronomy student working with an Australian Astronomical Observatory (AAO) astronomer has uncovered evidence of a new planet orbiting a binary star (two stars that orbit a common centre of mass).
Adding interest to this discovery is the observation that the planet orbits the stars on a tilt – an example of the weird and wonderful diversity of the Universe.
The binary star, KIC 5095269, system was first observed by NASA’s Kepler space telescope.
The newly-discovered planet has a mass 7.7 times more than Jupiter and orbits the binary star every 237.7 days.
“My PhD research involves performing an eclipse timing variation study of binary stars in order to look for any third bodies that may be present, like stars/brown dwarfs or planets,” PhD student Kelvin Getley, who lead authored the journal article announcing the discovery, said.
“I created a program that determined when one star passes in front of another as seen from Earth, and compared them to what we’d expect to see if there was nothing else in the system.
“My PhD supervisors, Professor Brad Carter and Dr Rachel King from the University of Southern Queensland (USQ), and Simon O'Toole from the AAO, guided and advised me, and helped come up with tests that could be done on the system to try to make sure what we were seeing was possible.”
Supervisor and AAO astronomer Dr O’Toole is an expert in exoplanetary systems.
“This is a really neat result,” Dr O’Toole said, “Planets orbiting two stars have been found before, but the cool thing here is that Kelvin has discovered a planet with a tilted orbit, more reminiscent of Pluto than the other planets in our Solar System."
Professor Carter leads USQ’s Astrophysics Research Program Team and commended Mr Getley on his work and discovery.
“Kelvin’s research demonstrates that evidence for new worlds can be gathered through an innovative analysis of the Kepler space telescope's treasure trove of observational data," he said.
Mr Getley is studying a PhD in Astronomy and is an external USQ student living in Charlton, Victoria, with the support of the AAO.
“Being an astronomer is something that I've wanted to be basically my entire life,” he said.
“My granddad was interested in astronomy as a hobby so I grew up reading his books. Doing this research, and making a discovery like this is amazing.”
The AAO is a division of the Department of Industry, Innovation and Science.
Publication details:
A.K. Getley (University of Southern Queensland), B. Carter (University of Southern Queensland), R. King (University of Southern Queensland) and S. O’Toole (Australian Astronomical Observatory), “Evidence for a planetary mass third body orbiting the binary star KIC 5095269”, Published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS) through Oxford University Press. MNRAS, 2017, 468, 2932
Web & eReseach Administrator, Australian Astronomical Observatory M: +61 434 916 378 E:simon.otoole@aao.gov.au Prof. Andrew Hopkins Head of Research and Outreach, Australian Astronomical Observatory, M: +61 432 855 049
E:andrew.hopkins@aao.gov.au
PB3877 is a hyper-velocity wide binary star zooming through the outskirts of the Milky Way galaxy.
This image shows its current location as well as our Sun.
Credit: Thorsten Brand
MAUNAKEA, Hawaii —A team of astronomers at the Friedrich Alexander University led by Péter Németh has discovered a binary star moving nearly at the escape velocity of our galaxy. There are about two dozen so-called hypervelocity stars known to be escaping the galaxy. While all of them are single stars, PB3877 is the first wide binary star found to travel at such a high speed. Additionally, the results of the new study challenge the commonly accepted scenario that hypervelocity stars are accelerated by the supermassive black hole at the galactic center. The findings are being published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters today.
The team, in collaboration with researchers from the California Institute of Technology, showed the binary cannot originate from the Galactic Center, and no other mechanism is known that is able to accelerate a wide binary to such a high velocity without disrupting it. They therefore hypothesized there must be a lot of dark matter to keep the star bound to the Milky Way galaxy; or the binary star, PB3877, could be an intruder that has been born in another galaxy and may or may not leave the Milky Way again.
PB3877 was first reported to be a hyper-velocity, hot compact star, when it was discovered form the Sloan Digital Sky-Survey (SDSS) data in 2011. New spectroscopic observations were done with the 10 meter Keck II telescope at W. M. Keck Observatory on Maunakea, Hawaii and with the 8.2 meter Very Large Telescope (VLT) of the European Southern Observatory (ESO) in Chile.Caltech astronomers Thomas Kupfer and Felix Fürst observed PB3877 with the ESI Instrument fitted on the Keck II telescope.
“When we looked at the new data, much to our surprise, we found weak absorption lines that could not come from the hot star,” Kupfer said. “The cool companion, just like the hot primary, shows a high radial velocity. Hence, the two stars form a binary system, which is the first hyper-velocity wide binary candidate.”
The surface of the hot compact star is more than five times hotter than the Sun, while the companion is a thousand degrees cooler than our Sun. The system was determined to be 18,000 light years away. The mass of the hot compact star is only half of the mass of our Sun, and the companion is .7 times the mass of the Sun.
“We studied hyper-velocity stars since 2005, the year of discovery of the first three,” said team-member Ulrich Heber. “In the meantime about two dozen have been found, but all are single, none has a companion directly visible in its spectrum.”
The center of our galaxy hosts a supermassive black hole that can accelerate and eject stars from the galaxy by disrupting an original binary star. Hence, most hyper-velocity stars are believed to originate from the galactic center.
“From our calculations we can exclude the Galactic Center as the place of origin, because its trajectory never came close to it,” said team member Eva Ziegerer, specialist in stellar kinematics who collected the astrometry data and reconstructed the orbit of the binary. “Other ejection mechanisms, such as stellar collisions and a supernova explosion have been proposed, but all of them would lead to the disruption of a wide binary.”
“PB3877 may be an intruder from another galaxy,” Németh said. “In that case its prolonged gradual acceleration would not harm its integrity. The outskirts of our Galaxy contain various stellar streams that are believed to be the remnants of dwarf galaxies that were torn to shreds by the strong tidal force of the Milky Way.”
Unfortunately, the available data do not allow to make a connection to any of the known streams. Therefore, the origin of the binary remains unclear and so is its future. Whether or not the system remains bound to the Galaxy depends on the amount of dark matter in the Galaxy. Therefore, the mere existence of this binary puts pressure on our models and on our current understanding of dark matter in the Milky Way.
“We used different mass models to calculate the probability that the star will actually remain bound to the Galaxy. Only for the most massive Galaxy model this is the case. This makes PB3877 an excellent target to probe dark matter halo models,” said Andreas Irrgang, research associate at the Dr. Karl Remeis-Observatory.
The research continues with high-resolution spectroscopy to confirm the orbital properties of PB3877 and with a photometric follow-up to search for variability. “By finding further stars or binaries on similar orbits would indicate an external origin. Therefore, our quest for similar strangers will continue,” Németh said.
The W. M. Keck Observatory operates the largest, most scientifically productive telescopes on Earth. The two, 10-meter optical/infrared telescopes near the summit of Maunakea on the Island of Hawaii feature a suite of advanced instruments including imagers, multi-object spectrographs, high-resolution spectrographs, integral-field spectrographs and world-leading laser guide star adaptive optics systems.
ESI (Echellette Spectrograph and Imager) is a medium-resolution visible-light spectrograph that records spectra from 0.39 to 1.1 microns in each exposure. Built at UCO/Lick Observatory by a team led by Prof. Joe Miller, ESI also has a low-resolution mode and can image in a 2 x 8 arc-min field of view. An upgrade provided an integral field unit that can provide spectra everywhere across a small, 5.7 x 4.0 arc-sec field. Astronomers have found a number of uses for ESI, from observing the cosmological effects of weak gravitational lensing to searching for the most metal-poor stars in our galaxy.
Keck Observatory is a private 501(c) 3 non-profit organization and a scientific partnership of the California Institute of Technology, the University of California and NASA.
Science Contacts Péter Németh Friedrich Alexander University (FAU), Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany pnemeth1981@gmail.com +49 951 952 22 19 Eva Ziegerer Friedrich Alexander University (FAU), Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Eva.Ziegerer@sternwarte.uni-erlangen.de +49 951 952 22 20 Prof. Ulrich Heber Friedrich Alexander University (FAU), Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany heber@sternwarte.uni-erlangen.de +49 951 952 22 14
Sharing the Light of Two Suns: This artist's concept illustrates Kepler-47, the first transiting circumbinary system. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle. Clickherefor multiple resolutions and full caption.
Orbiting in the Habitable Zone of Two Suns: This diagram compares our own solar system to Kepler-47, a double-star system containing two planets, one orbiting in the so-called "habitable zone." Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle. Clickherefor multiple resolutions and full caption.
The planets Kepler-47b and Kepler-47c: Kepler-47b has three times the radius of earth and orbits the pair of stars in less than 50 days while Kepler-47c is thought to be a gaseous giant, slightly larger than Neptune with an orbital period of 303 days. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle. Clickherefor multiple resolutions and full caption.
Coming less than a year after the announcement of the first circumbinary planet, Kepler-16b, NASA's Kepler mission has discovered multiple transiting planets orbiting two suns for the first time. This system, known as a circumbinary planetary system, is 4,900 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus.
This discovery proves that more than one planet can form and persist in the stressful realm of a binary star and demonstrates the diversity of planetary systems in our galaxy.
Astronomers detected two planets in the Kepler-47 system, a pair of orbiting stars that eclipse each other every 7.5 days from our vantage point on Earth. One star is similar to the sun in size, but only 84 percent as bright. The second star is diminutive, measuring only one-third the size of the sun and less than 1 percent as bright.
"In contrast to a single planet orbiting a single star, the planet in a circumbinary system must transit a 'moving target.' As a consequence, time intervals between the transits and their durations can vary substantially, sometimes short, other times long," said Jerome Orosz, associate professor of astronomy at San Diego State University and lead author of the paper. "The intervals were the telltale sign these planets are in circumbinary orbits."
The inner planet, Kepler-47b, orbits the pair of stars in less than 50 days. While it cannot be directly viewed, it is thought to be a sweltering world, where the destruction of methane in its super-heated atmosphere might lead to a thick haze that could blanket the planet. At three times the radius of Earth, Kepler-47b is the smallest known transiting circumbinary planet.
The outer planet, Kepler-47c, orbits its host pair every 303 days, placing it in the so-called "habitable zone," the region in a planetary system where liquid water might exist on the surface of a planet. While not a world hospitable for life, Kepler-47c is thought to be a gaseous giant slightly larger than Neptune, where an atmosphere of thick bright water-vapor clouds might exist.
"Unlike our sun, many stars are part of multiple-star systems where two or more stars orbit one another. The question always has been -- do they have planets and planetary systems? This Kepler discovery proves that they do," said William Borucki, Kepler mission principal investigator at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. "In our search for habitable planets, we have found more opportunities for life to exist."
To search for transiting planets, the research team used data from the Kepler space telescope, which measures dips in the brightness of more than 150,000 stars. Additional ground-based spectroscopic observations using telescopes at the McDonald Observatory at the University of Texas at Austin helped characterize the stellar properties. The findings are published in the journal Science.
"The presence of a full-fledged circumbinary planetary system orbiting Kepler-47 is an amazing discovery," said Greg Laughlin, professor of Astrophysics and Planetary Science at the University of California in Santa Cruz. "These planets are very difficult to form using the currently accepted paradigm, and I believe that theorists, myself included, will be going back to the drawing board to try to improve our understanding of how planets are assembled in dusty circumbinary disks."
Ames manages Kepler's ground system development, mission operations and science data analysis. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., managed the Kepler mission development.
Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colo., developed the Kepler flight system and supports mission operations with the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore archives, hosts and distributes Kepler science data. Kepler is NASA's tenth Discovery Mission and funded by NASA's Science Mission Directorate at the agency's headquarters in Washington.
This artist's impression shows the tightest of the new record breaking binary systems. Two active M4 type red dwarfs orbit each other every 2.5 hours, as they continue to spiral inwards. Eventually they will coalesce into a single star. Credit: J. Pinfield, for the RoPACS network.
A team of astronomers have used the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) on Hawaii to discover four pairs of stars that orbit each other in less than 4 hours. Until now it was thought that such close-in binary stars could not exist. The new discoveries come from the telescope's Wide Field Camera (WFCAM) Transit Survey, and appear in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
About half of the stars in our Milky Way galaxy are, unlike our Sun, part of a binary system in which two stars orbit each other. Most likely, the stars in these systems were formed close together and have been in orbit around each other from birth onwards. It was always thought that if binary stars form too close to each other, they would quickly merge into one single, bigger star. This was in line with many observations taken over the last three decades showing the abundant population of stellar binaries, but none with orbital periods shorter than 5 hours.
For the first time, the team have investigated binaries of red dwarfs, stars up to ten times smaller and a thousand times less luminous than the Sun. Although they form the most common type of star in the Milky Way, red dwarfs do not show up in normal surveys because of their dimness in visible light.
For the last five years, UKIRT has been monitoring the brightness of hundreds of thousands of stars, including thousands of red dwarfs, in near-infrared light, using its state-of-the-art Wide-Field Camera (WFC). This study of cool stars in the time domain has been a focus of the European (FP7) Initial Training Network 'Rocky Planets Around Cool Stars' (RoPACS) which studies planets and cool stars.
"To our complete surprise, we found several red dwarf binaries with orbital periods significantly shorter than the 5 hour cut-off found for Sun-like stars, something previously thought to be impossible", said Bas Nefs from Leiden Observatory in the Netherlands, lead author of the paper. "It means that we have to rethink how these close-in binaries form and evolve."
Since stars shrink in size early in their lifetime, the fact that these very tight binaries exist means that their orbits must also have shrunk as well since their birth, otherwise the stars would have been in contact early on and have merged. However, it is not at all clear how these orbits could have shrunk by so much.
One possible answer to this riddle is that cool stars in binary systems are much more active and violent than previously thought.
It is possible that the magnetic field lines radiating out from the cool star companions get twisted and deformed as they spiral in towards each other, generating the extra activity through stellar wind, explosive flaring and star spots. Powerful magnetic activity could apply the brakes to these spinning stars, slowing them down so that they move closer together.
"Without UKIRT's superb sensitivity, it wouldn't have been possible to find these extraordinary pairs of red dwarfs", said David Pinfield. He adds: "The active nature of these stars and their apparently powerful magnetic fields has profound implications for the environments around red dwarfs throughout our Galaxy."
Dr Simon Hodgkin Institute of Astronomy University of Cambridge (Co-PI of WTS) Tel: +44 (0)1223 766657 sth@ast.cam.ac.uk (http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/)
Further information
The team publish their work in the paper, "Four ultra-short period eclipsing M-dwarf binaries in the WFCAM Transit Survey", S. V. Nefs et al, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, in press. A preprint of the paper can be downloaded fromhttp://arxiv.org/abs/1206.1200
Notes for editors With a 3.8 metre diameter mirror, the UK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT:http://www.jach.hawaii.edu/UKIRT/) is the second largest dedicated infrared telescope in the world. Sited at an altitude of 4200 m on the top of the volcano Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii, it began operations in 1979. UKIRT is carrying out the UKIRT Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS:http://www.ukidss.org/) searching for objects from nearby brown dwarfs to distant quasars. In 2012 the UKIDSS team received the RAS Group Award.
The Royal Astronomical Society (RAS,www.ras.org.uk), founded in 1820, encourages and promotes the study of astronomy, solar-system science, geophysics and closely related branches of science. The RAS organizes scientific meetings, publishes international research and review journals, recognizes outstanding achievements by the award of medals and prizes, maintains an extensive library, supports education through grants and outreach activities and represents UK astronomy nationally and internationally. Its more than 3500 members (Fellows), a third based overseas, include scientific researchers in universities, observatories and laboratories as well as historians of astronomy and others.
Artist’s conception of a supermassive black hole (lower left) with its tremendous gravity capturing one star (bluish, center) from a pair of binary stars, while hurling the second star (yellowish, upper right) away at a hypervelocity of more than 1 million mph. The grayish blobs are other stars captured in a cluster near the black hole. They appear distorted because the black hole’s gravity curves spacetime and thus bends the starlight. Photo Credit: Ben Bromley, University of Utah.Click to view
University of Utah astrophysicist Ben Bromley and colleagues at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory say that calculations and observations provide strong evidence that supermassive black holes grow so big by repeatedly capturing one star from pairs of binary stars, while hurling the other binary partner into space at a hypervelocity of more than 1 million mph. Photo Credit: Lee J. Siegel, University of Utah.Click to view
Evidence Indicates They Eat Binary Star Partners
April 2, 2012 – A study led by a University of Utah astrophysicist found a new explanation for the growth of supermassive black holes in the center of most galaxies: they repeatedly capture and swallow single stars from pairs of stars that wander too close.
Using new calculations and previous observations of our own Milky Way and other galaxies, “we found black holes grow enormously as a result of sucking in captured binary star partners,” says physics and astronomy Professor Ben Bromley, lead author of the study, which is set for online publication April 2 in Astrophysical Journal Letters.
“I believe this has got to be the dominant method for growing supermassive black holes,” he adds. “There are two ways to grow a supermassive black hole: with gas clouds and with stars. Sometimes there’s gas and sometimes there is not. We know that from observations of other galaxies. But there are always stars.”
“Our mechanism is an efficient way to bring a star to a black hole,” Bromley says. “It’s really hard to target a single star at a black hole. It’s a lot easier to throw a binary at it,” just as it’s more difficult to hit a target using a slingshot, which hurls a single stone, than with a bola, which hurls two weights connected by a cord.
A binary pair of stars orbiting each other “is essentially a single object much bigger than the size of the individual stars, so it is going to interact with the black hole more efficiently,” he explains. “The binary doesn’t have to get nearly as close for one of the stars to get ripped away and captured.”
But to prove the theory will require more powerful telescopes to find three key signs: large numbers of small stars captured near supermassive black holes, more observations of stars being “shredded” by gravity from black holes, and large numbers of “hypervelocity stars” that are flung from galaxies at more than 1 million mph when their binary partners are captured.
Bromley, a University of Utah astrophysicist, did the study with astronomers Scott Kenyon, Margaret Geller and Warren Brown, all of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Mass. The study was funded by both institutions.
What Does a Supermassive Black Hole Eat: Gas or Stars?
Black holes are objects in space so dense that not even light can escape their gravity, although powerful jets of light and energy can be emitted from a black hole’s vicinity as gas and stars are sucked into it.
Small black holes result from the collapse of individual stars. But the centers of most galaxies, including our own Milky Way, are occupied by what are popularly known as “supermassive” black holes that contain mass ranging from 1 million to 10 billion stars the size of our sun.
Astrophysicists long have debated how supermassive black holes grew during the 14 billion years since the universe began in a great expansion of matter and energy named the Big Bang. One side believes black holes grow larger mainly by sucking in vast amounts of gas; the other side says they grow primarily by capturing and sucking in stars.
Just last month, other researchers published a theory that a black hole sucks in “food” by tipping its “plates” – two tilted gas disks colliding as they orbit the black hole – in a way that makes the speeding gas slow down so the black hole can swallow it.
Bromley says that theory overcomes a key problem: gas flows into black holes inefficiently. “But are misaligned gas disks common enough to be important for black hole growth?” he asks. “It’s fair to say that gas contributes to the growth of black holes, but it is still uncertain how.”
The new theory about binary stars – a pair of stars that orbit each other – arose from Bromley’s earlier research to explain hypervelocity stars, which have been observed leaving our Milky Way galaxy at speeds ranging from 1.1 million to 1.8 million mph, compared with the roughly 350,000 mph speed of most stars.
Munching Binaries: One is Captured, One Speeds Away
“The hypervelocity stars we see come from binary stars that stray close to the galaxy’s massive black hole,” he says. “The hole peels off one binary partner, while the other partner – the hypervelocity star – gets flung out in a gravitational slingshot.”
“We put the numbers together for observed hypervelocity stars and other evidence, and found that the rate of binary encounters [with our galaxy’s supermassive black hole] would mean most of the mass of the galaxy’s black hole came from binary stars,” Bromley says. “We estimated these interactions for supermassive black holes in other galaxies and found that they too can grow to billions of solar masses in this way.”
As many as half of all stars are in binary pairs, so they are plentiful in the Milky Way and other galaxies, he adds. But the study assumed conservatively that only 10 percent of stars exist in binary pairs.
The new study looked at each step in the process of a supermassive black hole eating binary stars, and calculated what would be required for the process to work in terms of the rates at which hypervelocity stars are produced, binary partners are captured, the captured stars are bound to the black hole in elongated orbits and then sucked into it.
The scientists then compared the results with actual observations of supermassive black holes, stars clustering near them and “tidal disruption events” in which black holes in other galaxies are seen to shred stars while pulling them into the hole.
“It fits together, and it works,” Bromley says. “When we look at observations of how stars are accumulating in our galactic center, it’s clear that much of the mass of the black hole likely came from binary stars that were torn apart.”
He refers to the process of a supermassive black hole capturing stars from binary pairs as “filling the bathtub.” Once the tub – the area near the black hole – is occupied by a cluster of captured stars, they go “down the drain” into the black hole over millions of years. His study shows the “tub” fills at about the same rate it drains, meaning stars captured by a supermassive black hole eventually are swallowed.
The study’s key conclusions:
The theory accurately predicts the rate (one every 1,000 to 100,000 years) at which hypervelocity stars are observed leaving our galaxy and at which stars are captured into the star cluster seen near our galaxy’s supermassive black hole.
The rate of “tidal disruption events,” which are stars being shredded and pulled into supermassive black holes in other galaxies, also matches what the theory predicts, based on the limited number seen since they first were observed in the early 2000s. That rate also is one every 1,000 to 100,000 years.
The calculations show how the theory’s rate of binary capture and consumption can explain how the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole has at least doubled to quadrupled in mass during the past 5 billion to 10 billion years.
When the researchers considered the number of stars near the Milky Way’s center, their speed and the odds they will encounter the supermassive black hole, they estimated that one binary star will be torn apart every 1,000 years by the hole’s gravity.
During the last 10 billion years, that would mean the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole ate 10 million solar masses – more than enough to account for the hole’s actual size of 4 million solar masses.
“We found a wide range of black hole masses can be explained by this process,” Bromley says.
Confirmation of the theory must await more powerful orbiting and ground-based telescopes. To confirm the theory, such telescopes should find many more stars in the cluster near the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole (we now see only the brightest ones), a certain rate of hypervelocity stars in southern skies, and more observations of stars being shredded in other galaxies.
The full study is available on the arXiv preprint server at:
The study will be published online by late April 2 by Astrophysical Journal Letters, but only the abstract may be available to nonsubscribers:http://iopscience.iop.org/2041-820