Showing posts with label White Dwarfs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label White Dwarfs. Show all posts

Sunday, June 01, 2025

Triple Stellar Systems as Gravitational Wave Sources

Scientific visualization of numerical relativity simulations showing gravitational waves emitted by inspiraling compact objects. Credit: T. Dietrich, S. Ossokine, H. Pfeiffer, and A. Buonanno (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics).




A schematic diagram of possible key processes that drive the evolutionary phases of a triple evolution leading to the formation of double white dwarfs in the LISA frequency bandwidth. Depending on the separation of the inner binary and the inclination angle of the two orbital planes, the third star can interact in various ways with the inner binary. Just over half the systems retain the third star, though it is typically too distant to affect the gravitational wave signal significantly. © MPA



Ground-based gravitational wave detectors like LIGO and Virgo have brought significant attention to binary systems composed of black holes and neutron stars as gravitational wave sources. However, two white dwarfs in a binary system are expected to be far more numerous. In particular, the pre-merger phase of double white dwarfs could lead to high-energy astrophysical events that would emit gravitational waves detectable by the European Space Agency’s upcoming Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) mission. Understanding how these double white dwarfs form is essential to interpreting the future LISA data. For the first time, researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics (MPA) have now quantitatively assessed the impact of triple evolution on LISA sources. This study underscores the importance of triple interactions in the formation of double white dwarfs, revealing previously unexplored pathways that contribute to the gravitational-wave sources LISA will observe.

Stars often form in hierarchical triples, where a close binary system is orbited by a distant third star. These triple systems undergo complex gravitational interactions, which can dramatically alter the evolution of the stars. Such interactions can induce mass exchange between stars, mergers, or the disruption of one of the stars, all of which influence the final configuration of the system. Thus, triple dynamics can play a pivotal role in driving white dwarf binaries into the gravitational wave frequency range detectable by LISA.

In this research, doctoral student Abinaya Swaruba Rajamuthukumar, along with a group of MPA researchers, studied how triple star systems contribute to the population of double white dwarfs detectable by LISA. They combined simulations of triple star evolution using the Multiple Stellar Evolution (MSE) code with a Milky Way-like galaxy from the cosmological simulation TNG50. The study found that approximately 7.2 million double white dwarfs emitting gravitational waves in the LISA frequency band originate from triple systems, nearly double the number formed in isolated binaries, which account for about 3.8 million. Moreover, about 57% of the LISA double white dwarfs from triples retain a bound third star, though it is typically too distant to leave an observable imprint on the gravitational wave signal.

The team identified five key evolutionary pathways through which triple systems can produce LISA-detectable sources. These include induced mass transfer, outer binary mergers, ejected tertiaries, triple common envelope phases, and effectively isolated inner binaries (see graphic). The overall population properties of double white dwarfs from triple systems and those with a binary-origin are largely indistinguishable. Interestingly, the triple channel introduces a rare but intriguing subset of highly eccentric systems that emit burst-like gravitational wave signals, offering a distinct observational signature for LISA.

This study provides the first detailed exploration of triple-star evolution in the context of gravitational wave astrophysics. As LISA prepares for launch in 2035, these findings will be essential for accurately interpreting the Galactic population of gravitational wave sources and refining data analysis techniques. The results underscore the need to account for triple evolution when modeling LISA sources, paving the way for a more comprehensive understanding of the Milky Way’s gravitational wave sources.




Authors:

Abinaya Swaruba Rajamuthukumar
PhD student
tel:2248
abinaya@mpa-garching.mpg.de

Valeriya Korol
Postdoc
tel:2252
korol@mpa-garching.mpg.de

Jakob Stegmann

tel:2237
stegmaja@mpa-garching.mpg.de



Original publication

Rajamuthukumar, Abinaya Swaruba; Korol, Valeriya; Stegmann, Jakob; Preece, Holly; Pakmor, Rüdiger; Justham, Stephen; Toonen, Silvia; de Mink, Selma E.
The role of triple evolution in the formation of LISA double white dwarfs
submitted
Source


Sunday, February 04, 2024

Monthly Roundup: Supernovae in the Spotlight

This narrow ribbon of glowing gas is a tiny section of the expanding bubble of the Cygnus Loop supernova remnant;

Credit:NASA, ESA, Ravi Sankrit (STScI)

A supernova is a spectacular way for a star to die. Massive stars meet this fate when the outward pressure exerted by core nuclear fusion can no longer hold off the gravity of the star’s outer layers, and the remnants of lower-mass stars can attain this honor through accretion or collisions. Today we’ll introduce four research articles that examine various aspects of supernova science, from attempts to determine how lightweight a supernova progenitor star can be to exploring why some massive stars don’t produce supernovae at all.


The main stellar evolution pathways. It’s not yet clear exactly which stars explode as supernovae and which become white dwarfs. Credit:
ESA

Probing the Smallest Supernova Stars

Where is the dividing line between stars that end their lives in core-collapse supernovae and those that are fated to become white dwarfs? The least massive stars that undergo core collapse lie somewhere in the 8–12-solar-mass range, and refining the estimate further requires researchers to track down the faintest, most rapidly evolving supernovae.

Luckily, increasing coverage by transient-hunting surveys has generated a growing sample of these faint, fast events. Kaustav Das (California Institute of Technology) and coauthors studied nine supernovae detected by the Zwicky Transient Facility that were found to have certain chemical abundance ratios that hint at the progenitor stars being low mass. These supernovae are calcium-rich Type IIb supernovae, which have much larger [Ca II]/[O I] ratios than typical core-collapse supernovae.

Das’s team used spectra of each of these supernovae to measure the amount of oxygen present, which can be used in theoretical models to estimate the mass of the star that exploded. The mass estimates for all stars in the sample were less than 12 solar masses, suggesting that this type of supernova tends to arise from stars near the low-mass end of the progenitor mass range. The current sample of known calcium-rich Type IIb supernovae is still small, but future detections should allow researchers to refine models and improve estimates.

Not all massive stars end their lives as supernovae, leaving behind a supernova remnant like W49B shown here.
Credit: X-ray:
NASA/CXC/MIT/L.Lopez et al.; Infrared: Palomar; Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLA

Focusing on Failed Supernovae

When massive stars extinguish their core nuclear fusion and collapse, do they always generate luminous supernovae? Both observations and theory suggest that the answer is no, with some would-be supernovae forming a black hole with no accompanying supernova. Up to a third of massive stars might fail to generate a supernova!

Eric Coughlin (Syracuse University) performed a mathematical exploration of failed supernovae, focusing on the creation and propagation of a shock between the collapsing core and the outward-moving outer layers of the star. Coughlin showed that while some dying massive stars don’t produce supernovae per se, they still undergo an explosion that marks their impending demise. The strength of the explosion from a failed supernova depends on the properties of the star and how much of its mass is lost in the form of neutrinos: chargeless, nearly massless subatomic particles that rarely interact with matter.

In addition to the mathematical solutions that described the explosions, the equations also permitted a solution in which the matter settles near the central object. While we’ll have to wait for future work for a full examination of these solutions, it’s possible that they’ll apply to smaller stellar outbursts that do not destroy the star.


The event rates for a 1.98-solar-mass protoneutron star with various accretion rates as seen by Super-Kamiokande (left) and DUNE (right) and for normal (top) and inverted (bottom) neutrino mass hierarchies. Credit: Akaho et al. 2024

Prospects for Detecting Supernova Neutrinos

When a massive star’s core collapses, it can form a black hole or a neutron star: an extremely dense, rapidly spinning, city-sized sphere made almost entirely of neutrons. As protons and electrons are crushed into neutrons in the star’s core, the transformation produces neutrinos that push the star’s collapsing outer layers outward. While most of the star’s outer layers escape, forming the glowing, complex structures of a supernova remnant, a small fraction of the material falls back onto the protoneutron star, generating even more neutrinos.

Ryuichiro Akaho (Waseda University) and collaborators calculated the likelihood of detecting the neutrinos that are produced when material rebounding from the collapsed stellar core falls back onto the core. Using detailed neutrino radiation–hydrodynamics simulations, the team modeled the fluxes and flavors of the neutrinos produced about ten seconds after the supernova occurs.

Akaho’s team found that the mass of the protoneutron star and the rate at which it gathers material from its surroundings both have an impact on the output neutrino luminosity and the average energy of the neutrinos. For a supernova happening about 33,000 light-years away, the neutrino flux should rise above the background measured by the existing Super-Kamiokande and under-construction Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) detectors. The exact strength of the signal depends on several factors, including neutrino oscillation — the process through which a neutrino born in a certain “flavor” morphs to a different flavor as it travels through space.


Illustrations of the two main Type Ia supernova pathways: the single-degenerate model (top) and the double-degenerate model (bottom). Both images from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

Investigating Type Ia Supernova Diversity

Supernovae aren’t always the result of massive stars collapsing. Many arise from white dwarfs, which are the exposed cores of low- to intermediate-mass stars that have finished fusing hydrogen in their cores and lost their outer layers. When a white dwarf accretes gas from a companion star, the white dwarf gains mass and heats up, eventually triggering a supernova. Alternatively, the collision of two white dwarfs can generate a supernova. Supernovae arising from white dwarfs are called Type Ia or thermonuclear runaway supernovae.

Observations show that Type Ia supernovae have substantial variety in their light curves and properties, leading Mao Ogawa (Kyoto University) and collaborators to investigate the origins of this diversity. Ogawa’s team focused on the division between normal-velocity and high-velocity supernovae, which are differentiated by the velocity of their ejecta.

The team selected a sample of 14 Type Ia supernovae for which spectra were collected within one week of the explosion being detected at Earth. The sample included high-velocity supernovae, normal-velocity supernovae, and some that were similar to the peculiar supernova SN 1999aa. The team then used radiative transfer modeling to model the spectra and extract the properties of the supernova ejecta. Ultimately, they found that the supernovae fell into two groups: one with high-density, carbon-poor ejecta, which makes up the high-velocity sample and some of the normal-velocity sample and one that has low-density, carbon rich ejecta, which makes up the remaining normal-velocity sample and those like SN 1999aa. While more work remains to be done, the team suspects these two groups might be the result of different formation mechanisms.

By Kerry Hensley




Citation

“Probing the Low-Mass End of Core-Collapse Supernovae Using a Sample of Strongly Stripped Calcium-Rich Type IIb Supernovae from the Zwicky Transient Facility,” Kaustav K. Das et al 2023 ApJ 959 12. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/acfeeb

“The Division Between Weak and Strong Explosions from Failed Supernovae,” Eric R Coughlin 2023 ApJ 955 110. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/acf313

“Detectability of Late-Time Supernova Neutrinos with Fallback Accretion onto Protoneutron Star,” Ryuichiro Akaho et al 2024 ApJ 960 116. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ad118c

“Systematic Investigation of Very-early-phase Spectra of Type Ia Supernovae,” Mao Ogawa et al 2023 ApJ 955 49. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/acec74


Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Never-before-seen Fast Radio Burst sheds new light on deep space signals


Dynamic spectra (or “waterfall” plots) for all the bursts from FRB 20220912A detected using the Allen Telescope Array, the frequency-averaged pulse profiles, and the time-averaged spectra. Credit: Sofia Z. Sheikh et al., SETI Institute
Licence type: Attribution (CC BY 4.0)


Animation of discovery plots for the 35 FRBs, shown in chronological order. Credit: Sofia Z. Sheikh et al., SETI Institute
Licence type:
Attribution (CC BY 4.0)



Astronomers are continuing to unravel the mystery of deep space signals after discovering a never-before-seen quirk in a newly-detected Fast Radio Burst (FRB).

FRBs are millisecond-long, extremely bright flashes of radio light that generally come from outside our Milky Way galaxy. Most happen only once but some “repeaters” send out follow-up signals, adding to the intrigue surrounding their origin.

A new study published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society has now shed new light on them, after spotting a “highly active” repeating FRB signal that is behaving differently to anything ever detected before.

Scientists at the SETI Institute in California recorded 35 FRBs from one source, FRB 20220912A, over a period of two months and found that a fascinating pattern emerged.


Like most repeating FRBs, each burst drifted from higher to lower frequencies over time.

But with FRB 20220912A there was also a never-before-seen drop in the centre frequency of the bursts, revealing what sounds like a cosmic slide-whistle when converted into a sonification using notes on a xylophone.

In it, most of the highest notes can be heard in the first few seconds and the majority of the lowest ones in the final seconds, as if the xylophone player is repeatedly hitting the lowest available bar on the instrument.

Astronomers think at least some FRBs are generated by a type of neutron star known as a magnetar – the highly magnetized cores of dead stars – while other theories point the finger at colliding neutron star binaries or merging white dwarfs.

“This work is exciting because it provides both confirmation of known FRB properties and the discovery of some new ones,” said lead author Dr Sofia Sheikh, of the SETI Institute.

“We’re narrowing down the source of FRBs, for example, to extreme objects such as magnetars, but no existing model can explain all of the properties that have been observed so far.”

The researchers made their discovery after carrying out 541 hours of observations using the SETI Institute’s Allen Telescope Array (ATA).

They also tried to identify a pattern in the timings between the bursts but none was found, further illustrating the unpredictable and mystifying nature of these intense blasts of radio waves.

Nevertheless, the latest research is another step forward in the quest to unlock the secrets of FRBs, which generate as much energy in a thousandth of a second as our Sun does in an entire year.

“It has been wonderful to be part of the first FRB study done with the Allen Telescope Array (ATA) – this work proves that new telescopes with unique capabilities, like the ATA, can provide a new angle on outstanding mysteries in FRB science,” Dr Sheikh added.




Media contacts:

Rebecca McDonald
Director of Communications
SETI Institute

rmcdonald@seti.org

Robert Massey
Royal Astronomical Society
Mob: +44 (0)7802 877699

press@ras.ac.uk

Sam Tonkin
Royal Astronomical Society
Mob: +44 (0)7802 877700

press@ras.ac.uk

Science contacts:

Dr Sofia Sheikh, Postdoctoral Fellow at the SETI Institute

ssheikh@seti.org



Multimedia and captions

Supplied animated gif:
https://ras.ac.uk/media/1478

Animation of discovery plots for the 35 FRBs, shown in chronological order. The gradual shift towards the bottom of the observing window can be seen in the dedispersed frequency vs. time plot (top reddish subplot).

Sonification: https://ras.ac.uk/media/1481

This sound bite is a data sonification of the 101 sub-bursts observed with the ATA and analysed in this work. The centre frequency of each sub-burst is mapped to a xylophone note [in a one-octave A Lydian scale]. There is a lot of scatter in the notes, but most of the highest notes appear in the first few seconds, and most of the lowest notes appear in the last few seconds, as if the xylophone player is hitting the lowest available bar on the instrument repeatedly. We use statistical methods to verify that this trend from high to low is significant, and would likely continue if the ATA could observe at even lower frequency ranges (equivalent to ‘adding more notes’ at the bottom of the xylophone).



Further information

The new work appears in “Characterization of the Repeating FRB 20220912A with the Allen Telescope Array”, Sofia Z. Sheikh et al., Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, in press.

A pre-print paper is available on arXiv at https://arxiv.org/pdf/2312.07756



Notes for editors

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The RAS accepts papers for its journals based on the principle of peer review, in which fellow experts on the editorial boards accept the paper as worth considering. The Society issues press releases based on a similar principle, but the organisations and scientists concerned have overall responsibility for their content.

Keep up with the RAS on X, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and YouTube.

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Submitted by Sam Tonkin on Tue, 12/12/2023 - 16:09


Saturday, July 22, 2023

When White Dwarf Is on the Menu By Ben Cassese


Not everything astronomers observe has firmly supported explanations. Recently, however, advanced simulations have supported the hypothesis that certain flashes are the sign of a white dwarf in trouble.


A snapshot of a hydrodynamical simulation. The white dwarf core is shown in the inset; the long, spiraled streamer of gas represents material that has already been tidally stripped. Credit: Chen et al. 2023


Intermediate Mass, Extreme Danger

Intermediate mass black holes, though several thousand times smaller than their supermassive cousins, share many of the same egotistical personality traits. The more famous gargantuans tend to make themselves the center of attention by living in the middle of large galaxies and surrounding themselves with a dense core of stellar sycophants. Intermediate mass black holes similarly enjoy the spotlight, but on a smaller scale: they inhabit the centers of dwarf galaxies, or even smaller stellar clusters, but also surround themselves with many tightly-packed stars.

As a result of this dense environment, every now and then a star will get gravitationally bumped by its neighbors onto a trajectory that will carry it too close to the central black hole. Once within a certain distance, the star is doomed: as punishment for crossing an unseen barrier, the black hole will stretch the star into a long string of gas, which it will then consume. An even grislier fate awaits hardy white dwarf stars bumped onto very special trajectories that only graze this minimum distance. These stars will continue to circle the black hole on elongated, eccentric orbits, but each time they reach their closest distance, their outermost material will be peeled off and stripped away. Instead of destroying them quickly, the black hole will extend their suffering, slowly consuming them layer by layer, all the while burping out X-rays with each snack.
 

The rate at which a white dwarf loses mass to the black hole. Over time, tidal stripping becomes more and more effective, until a certain point at which the white dwarf cannot maintain its structural integrity and is completely disrupted. Credit: Chen et al. 2023


A Simulated Feast

That’s the story, anyway. Although astronomers have guessed that some strange X-ray flashes and quasi-repeating flares are the signs of the drawn-out ends to white dwarfs, they’ve never been sure since the process has mostly been studied only with analytic approximations. To more confidently attribute these strange observations to the slow deaths of white dwarfs near intermediate mass black holes, a team led by Jin-Hong Chen (Sun Yat-sen University) completed detailed hydrodynamical simulations that more accurately mimic the gruesome process.

The team found that yes, if intermediate mass black holes really were feasting on unsuspecting white dwarfs, they would periodically emit bright bursts of X-rays that we could detect with specialized space-based telescopes. Equally exciting, the team also found that if the dance of death were close enough to Earth (within about 100 million light-years, “nearby” by cosmic standards), next-generation gravitational wave detectors could also likely record the inspiral.

Though the instruments needed to record such a signal are still several years away, these accurate simulations of white dwarf tidal stripping will help future astronomers make sense of the strange, somewhat frightening processes that make things flash in the night.

By Ben Cassese


Citation

“Tidal Stripping of a White Dwarf by an Intermediate-mass Black Hole,” Jin-Hong Chen et al 2023 ApJ 947 32. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/acbfb6



Thursday, July 20, 2023

Two-Faced Star Exposed: Unusual White Dwarf Star is Made of Hydrogen on One Side and Helium on the Other


Artist’s rendition of janus, the blue-tinted dead cinder of a star that is composed primarily of hydrogen on one side and helium on the other (the hydrogen side appears brighter). the peculiar double-faced nature of this white dwarf star might be due to the interplay of magnetic fields and convection, or a mixing of materials. on the helium side, which appears bubbly, convection has destroyed the thin hydrogen layer on the surface and brought up the helium underneath. Image credit: K. Miller, Caltech/IPAC



Maunakea, Hawaiʻi – In a first for white dwarfs, the burnt-out cores of dead stars, astronomers have discovered that at least one member of this cosmic family is two-faced. One side of the white dwarf is composed of hydrogen, while the other is made up of helium.

The findings, which include data from the Zwicky Transient Facility at Caltech’s Palomar Observatory in San Diego, California and W. M. Keck Observatory on Maunakea, Hawaiʻi Island, are published in today’s online edition of the journal Nature.

“The surface of the white dwarf completely changes from one side to the other,” says Ilaria Caiazzo, a postdoctoral scholar at Caltech and lead author of the study. “When I show the observations to people, they are blown away.”

White dwarfs are the scalding remains of stars that were once like our Sun. As the stars age, they puff up into red giants, but eventually their outer fluffy material is blown away and their cores contract into dense, fiery-hot white dwarfs. Our Sun will evolve into a white dwarf in about 5 billion years.

The newfound white dwarf, nicknamed Janus after the two-faced Roman god of transition, was initially discovered by the ZTF, an instrument that scans the skies every night. Caiazzo had been searching for highly magnetized white dwarfs, such as the object known as ZTF J1901+1458, which she and her team found previously using ZTF. One candidate object stood out for its rapid changes in brightness, so Caiazzo decided to investigate further with the CHIMERA (Caltech HIgh-speed Multi-color camERA) instrument at Palomar, as well as with the camera HiPERCAM on the Gran Telescopio Canarias in Spain’s Canary Islands. Those data confirmed that the object, Janus, is rotating on its axis every 15 minutes.





Scientists think that magnetic fields may explain the unusual two-face appearance of the white dwarf nicknamed Janus. One side of the dead star’s surface is composed primarily of hydrogen, while the other side is helium, as seen in this artist’s animation. One theory states that asymmetric magnetic fields (seen as looping lines) may have influenced the mixing of materials in the white dwarf in such a way to have caused the uneven distribution. The white dwarf’s rotation has been sped up in this animation; normally, it rotates around its axis every 15 minutes. Credit: K. Miller, Caltech/IPAC



Subsequent observations made with Keck Observatory revealed the dramatic double-faced nature of the white dwarf. The team used the Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (LRIS) on the Keck I Telescope to view Janus in optical wavelengths (light that our eyes can see) as well as the Near-Infrared Echellette Spectrograph (NIRES) on the Keck II Telescope to observe the white dwarf in infrared wavelengths. The data revealed the white dwarf’s chemical fingerprints, which showed the presence of hydrogen when one side of the object was in view (with no signs of helium), and only helium when the other side swung into view.

What would cause a white dwarf floating alone in space to have such drastically different faces? The team acknowledges they are baffled but have come up with some possible theories. One idea is that we may be witnessing Janus undergoing a rare phase of white dwarf evolution.

“Not all, but some white dwarfs transition from being hydrogen- to helium-dominated on their surface,” Caiazzo explains. “We might have possibly caught one such white dwarf in the act.”

After white dwarfs are formed, their heavier elements sink to their cores and their lighter elements—hydrogen being the lightest of all—float to the top. Over time, as the white dwarfs cool, the materials are thought to mix together. In some cases, the hydrogen is mixed into the interior and diluted such that helium becomes more prevalent. Janus may embody this transition phase, but one pressing question is: Why is the transition happening in such a disjointed way, with one side evolving before the other?

The answer, according to the science team, may lie in magnetic fields.

“Magnetic fields around cosmic bodies tend to be asymmetric, or stronger on one side,” Caiazzo explains. “Magnetic fields can prevent the mixing of materials. So, if the magnetic field is stronger on one side, then that side would have less mixing and thus more hydrogen.”

Another theory proposed by the team to explain the two faces also depends on magnetic fields. But in this scenario, the fields are thought to change the pressure and density of the atmospheric gasses.

“The magnetic fields may lead to lower gas pressures in the atmosphere, and this may allow a hydrogen ‘ocean’ to form where the magnetic fields are strongest,” says co-author James Fuller, professor of theoretical astrophysics at Caltech. “We don’t know which of these theories are correct, but we can’t think of any other way to explain the asymmetric sides without magnetic fields.”

To help solve the mystery, the team hopes to find more Janus-like white dwarfs with ZTF’s sky survey. “ZTF is very good at finding strange objects,” Caiazzo says. Future surveys, such as those to be performed by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile, she says, should make finding variable white dwarfs even easier.
 



About LRIS

The Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (LRIS) is a very versatile and ultra-sensitive visible-wavelength imager and spectrograph built at the California Institute of Technology by a team led by Prof. Bev Oke and Prof. Judy Cohen and commissioned in 1993. Since then it has seen two major upgrades to further enhance its capabilities: the addition of a second, blue arm optimized for shorter wavelengths of light and the installation of detectors that are much more sensitive at the longest (red) wavelengths. Each arm is optimized for the wavelengths it covers. This large range of wavelength coverage, combined with the instrument’s high sensitivity, allows the study of everything from comets (which have interesting features in the ultraviolet part of the spectrum), to the blue light from star formation, to the red light of very distant objects. LRIS also records the spectra of up to 50 objects simultaneously, especially useful for studies of clusters of galaxies in the most distant reaches, and earliest times, of the universe. LRIS was used in observing distant supernovae by astronomers who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2011 for research determining that the universe was speeding up in its expansion.

About NIRES

The Near-Infrared Echellette Spectrograph (NIRES) is a prism cross-dispersed near-infrared spectrograph built at the California Institute of Technology by a team led by Chief Instrument Scientist Keith Matthews and Prof. Tom Soifer. Commissioned in 2018, NIRES covers a large wavelength range at moderate spectral resolution for use on the Keck II telescope and observes extremely faint red objects found with the Spitzer and WISE infrared space telescopes, as well as brown dwarfs, high-redshift galaxies, and quasars. Support for this technology was generously provided by the Mt. Cuba Astronomical Foundation.

About W. M. Keck Observatory

The W. M. Keck Observatory telescopes are among the most scientifically productive on Earth. The two 10-meter optical/infrared telescopes atop Maunakea on the Island of Hawaii feature a suite of advanced instruments including imagers, multi-object spectrographs, high-resolution spectrographs, integral-field spectrometers, and world-leading laser guide star adaptive optics systems. Some of the data presented herein were obtained at Keck Observatory, which is a private 501(c) 3 non-profit organization operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Observatory was made possible by the generous financial support of the W. M. Keck Foundation. The authors wish to recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence that the summit of Maunakea has always had within the Native Hawaiian community. We are most fortunate to have the opportunity to conduct observations from this mountain.



Tuesday, November 23, 2021

KPD 0005+5106: Roasted and Shredded by a Stellar Sidekick

KPD 0005+5106
Credit: Illustration: NASA/CXC/M. Weiss; X-ray (Inset): NASA/CXC/ASIAA/Y.-H. Chu, et al.


JPEG (309.4 kb)-Large JPEG (10.2 MB)- Tiff ( bytes) - More Images

A Tour of MG B2016+112 - More Animations



A team of scientists used NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA's XMM-Newton to investigate some unusual X-ray activity of a white dwarf star, as reported in our latest press release. The data suggest this white dwarf is blasting a companion object, which is either a low-mass star or planet, with waves of heat and radiation while pulling it apart through gravitational force.

Most stars, including the Sun, will become "white dwarfs" after they begin to run out of fuel, expand and cool into a red giant, and then lose their outer layers. This evolution leaves behind a stellar nub that slowly fades for billions of years. An artist's illustration shows a white dwarf as the blue-white sphere near the center.

Astronomers have observed that the white dwarf KPD 0005+5106, located about 1,300 light years from Earth, emits high-energy X-ray emission that regularly increases and decreases in X-ray brightness every 4.7 hours. This recurring ebb and flow of X-rays indicates that KPD 0005+5106 has an object in orbit around it — either a very low mass star or a planet — depicted in the illustration by the brown and red object on the right-hand side. The white dwarf pulls the material from the companion into a disk around itself, which the artist shows in orange, before it slams into its north and south poles.

The concentration of material hitting the white dwarf's poles is creating two bright spots of high-energy X-ray emission. As the white dwarf and its companion orbit around each other the hot spot facing more towards Earth would go in and out of view, causing the high-energy X-rays to regularly increase and decrease that Chandra observed.

The researchers looked at what would happen if this object was a planet with the mass about that of Jupiter, a possibility that agrees with the data more readily than a dim star or a brown dwarf. In their models, the white dwarf would pull material from the planet onto the white dwarf, a process that the planet could only survive for a few hundred million years before eventually being destroyed. This stolen material swirls around the white dwarf, which glows in X-rays that Chandra can detect.

A paper describing these results appeared in The Astrophysical Journal in April 2021 and a preprint is available online. The authors of the paper are You-Hua Chu (Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Academia Sinica in Taiwan), Jesús Toala (National Autonomous University of Mexico), Martín Guerrero and Florian Bauer (The Institute of Astrophysics of Andalusia in Spain), and Jana Bilikova and Robert Gruendel (University of Illinois, Urbana).

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center controls science from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.





Fast Facts for KPD 0005+5106:

Scale: X-ray image (inset) is about 1 arcmin (0.38 light years) across.
Category:
White Dwarfs & Planetary Nebulas
Constellation: Cassiopeia
Observation Date: March 19, 2008
Observation Time: 13 hours 10 minutes
Obs. ID: 8942
Instrument:
ACIS
References: Chu, Y-H., et al., 2021, ApJ, 910, 119; arXiv:2102.05035
Color Code: X-ray: purple
Distance Estimate: About 1,300 light years



Thursday, November 04, 2021

A New Astrogeology Study Suggests That Most Nearby Rocky Exoplanets Are Quite Unlike Anything in Our Solar System


Rock debris, the pieces ofa a former rocky planet that has broken up,  spiral inward toward a white dwarf in this illustration. Studying the atmospheres of white dwarfs that have been "polluted" by such debrir, a  NOIRLab  Astronomer and a Geologist have identified exotic rock types that do not exist in our Solar System. The results suggests that nearby rocky exoplanets must be even stranger and more diverse than previously thought. Credit: NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/J. da Silva


A New Astrogeology Study Suggests That Most Nearby Rocky Exoplanets Are Quite Unlike Anything in Our Solar System


Maunakea, Hawaiʻi – Astronomers have discovered thousands of planets orbiting stars in our galaxy – known as exoplanets. However, it’s difficult to know what exactly these planets are made of, or whether any resemble Earth. To try to find out, astronomer Siyi Xu of NSF’s NOIRLab partnered with geologist Keith Putirka of California State University, Fresno, to study the atmospheres of what are known as polluted white dwarfs.

These are the dense, collapsed cores of once-normal stars like the Sun that contain foreign material from planets, asteroids, or other rocky bodies that once orbited the star but eventually fell into the white dwarf and “contaminated” its atmosphere. By looking for elements that wouldn’t naturally exist in a white dwarf’s atmosphere (anything other than hydrogen and helium), scientists can figure out what the rocky planetary objects that fell into the star were made of.

Putirka and Xu looked at 23 polluted white dwarfs, all within about 650 light-years of the Sun, where calcium, silicon, magnesium, and iron had been measured with precision using W. M. Keck Observatory’s High-Resolution Echelle Spectrometer (HIRES) on Maunakea in Hawai‘i, the Hubble Space Telescope, and other observatories. The scientists then used the measured abundances of those elements to reconstruct the minerals and rocks that would form from them.

“Combining the high sensitivity of Keck’s HIRES instrument and Hubble’s Cosmic Origins Spectrograph is the best way to measure the chemical compositions of extrasolar planetary materials accreted onto polluted white dwarfs,” said Xu.

Putirka and Xu’s results are published in today’s issue of Nature Communications.

They found that these white dwarfs have a much wider range of compositions than any of the inner planets in our solar system, suggesting their planets had a wider variety of rock types. In fact, some of the compositions are so unusual that Putirka and Xu had to create new names (such as “quartz pyroxenites” and “periclase dunites”) to classify the novel rock types that must have existed on those planets.

“While some exoplanets that once orbited polluted white dwarfs appear similar to Earth, most have rock types that are exotic to our solar system,” said Xu. “They have no direct counterparts in the solar system.”

Putirka describes what these new rock types might mean for the rocky worlds they belong to.

“Some of the rock types that we see from the white dwarf data would dissolve more water than rocks on Earth and might impact how oceans are developed,” he explained. “Some rock types might melt at much lower temperatures and produce thicker crust than Earth rocks, and some rock types might be weaker, which might facilitate the development of plate tectonics.”

Earlier studies of polluted white dwarfs had found elements from rocky bodies, including calcium, aluminum, and lithium. However, Putirka and Xu explain that those are minor elements (which typically make up a small part of an Earth rock) and measurements of major elements (which make up a large part of an Earth rock), especially silicon, are needed to truly know what kind of rock types would have existed on those planets.

In addition, Putirka and Xu state that the high levels of magnesium and low levels of silicon measured in the white dwarfs’ atmospheres suggest that the rocky debris detected likely came from the interiors of the planets – from the mantle, not their crust.

Some previous studies of polluted white dwarfs reported signs that continental crust existed on the rocky planets that once orbited those stars, but Putirka and Xu found no evidence of crustal rocks. However, the observations do not completely rule out that the planets had continental crust or other crust types.

“We believe that if crustal rock exists, we are unable to see it, probably because it occurs in too small a fraction compared to the mass of other planetary components, like the core and mantle, to be measured,” Putirka stated.

According to Xu, the pairing of an astronomer and a geologist was the key to unlocking the secrets hidden in the atmospheres of the polluted white dwarfs.

“I met Keith Putirka at a conference and was excited that he could help me understand the systems that I was observing. He taught me geology and I taught him astronomy, and we figured out how to make sense of these mysterious exoplanetary systems.”





About HIRES

The High-Resolution Echelle Spectrometer (HIRES) produces spectra of single objects at very high spectral resolution, yet covering a wide wavelength range. It does this by separating the light into many “stripes” of spectra stacked across a mosaic of three large CCD detectors. HIRES is famous for finding exoplanets. Astronomers also use HIRES to study important astrophysical phenomena like distant galaxies and quasars, and find cosmological clues about the structure of the early universe, just after the Big Bang.


About W.M.Keck Observatory

The W. M. Keck Observatory telescopes are among the most scientifically productive on Earth. The two 10-meter optical/infrared telescopes atop Maunakea on the Island of Hawaiʻi feature a suite of advanced instruments including imagers, multi-object spectrographs, high-resolution spectrographs, integral-field spectrometers, and world-leading laser guide star adaptive optics systems. Some of the data presented herein were obtained at Keck Observatory, which is a private 501(c) 3 non-profit organization operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Observatory was made possible by the generous financial support of the W. M. Keck Foundation. The authors wish to recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence that the summit of Maunakea has always had within the Native Hawaiian community. We are most fortunate to have the opportunity to conduct observations from this mountain.



Thursday, October 14, 2021

G344.7-0.1: When a Stable Star Explodes Quick Look: When a Stable Star Explodes


G344.7-0.1
Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/Tokyo Univ. of Science/K. Fukushima, et al.;
IR: NASA/JPL/Spitzer; Radio: CSIRO/ATNF/ATCA

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White dwarfs are among the most stable of stars. Left on their own, these stars that have exhausted most of their nuclear fuel — while still typically as massive as the Sun — and shrunk to a relatively small size can last for billions or even trillions of years.

However, a white dwarf with a nearby companion star can become a cosmic powder keg. If the companion's orbit brings it too close, the white dwarf can pull material from it until the white dwarf grows so much that it becomes unstable and explodes. This kind of stellar blast is called a Type Ia supernova.

While it is generally accepted by astronomers that such encounters between white dwarfs and "normal" companion stars are one likely source of Type Ia supernova explosions, many details of the process are not well understood. One way to investigate the explosion mechanism is to look at the elements left behind by the supernova in its debris or ejecta.

This new composite image shows G344.7-0.1, a supernova remnant created by a Type Ia supernova, through the eyes of different telescopes. X-rays from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory (blue) have been combined with infrared data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope (yellow and green) as well as radio data from the NSF's Very Large Array and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation's Australia Telescope Compact Array (red).

Chandra is one of the best tools available for scientists to study supernova remnants and measure the composition and distribution of "heavy" elements — that is, anything other than hydrogen and helium — they contain.

Astronomers estimate that G344.7-0.1 is about 3,000 to 6,000 years old in Earth's time frame. On the other hand, the most well-known and widely-observed Type Ia remnants, including Kepler, Tycho, and SN 1006, have all exploded within the last millennium or so as seen from Earth. Therefore, this deep look at G344.7-0.1 with Chandra gives astronomers a window into an important phase later in the evolution of a Type Ia supernova remnant.

Both the expanding blast wave and the stellar debris produce X-rays in supernova remnants. As the debris moves outward from the initial explosion, it encounters resistance from surrounding gas and slows down, creating a reverse shock wave that travels back toward the center of the explosion. This process is analogous to a traffic jam on a highway, where as times passes an increasing number of cars will stop or slow down behind the accident, causing the traffic jam to travel backwards. The reverse shock heats the debris to millions of degrees, causing it to glow in X-rays.

Type Ia remnants like Kepler, Tycho and SN 1006 are too young for the reverse shock to have time to plausibly travel backwards to heat all of the debris in the remnant's center. However, the relatively advanced age of G344.7-0.1 means that the reverse shock has moved back through the entire debris field.

A separate color version of only the Chandra data shows X-ray emission from iron (blue) and silicon (red) respectively, and X-rays produced by the acceleration of electrons as they are deflected by the nuclei of atoms that are positively charged (green). The region with the highest density of iron and the arc-like structures of silicon are labeled.


G344.7-0.13
3 Color X-Ray Composite (Labeled)

The Chandra image of G344.7-0.1 shows that the region with the highest density of iron (blue) is surrounded by arc-like structures (green) containing silicon. Similar arc-like structures are found for sulfur, argon, and calcium. The Chandra data also suggests that the region with the highest density iron has been heated by the reverse shock more recently than the elements in the arc-like structures, implying that it is located near the true center of the stellar explosion. These results support the predictions of models for Type Ia supernova explosions, which show that heavier elements are produced in the interior of an exploding white dwarf.

This three-color Chandra image also shows that the densest iron is located to the right of the supernova remnant's geometric center. This asymmetry is likely caused by gas surrounding the remnant being denser on the right than it is on the left.

A paper describing these results was published in the July 1st, 2020 issue of The Astrophysical Journal and is available online. The authors of the study are Kotaro Fukushima (Tokyo University of Science, Japan), Hiroya Yamaguchi (JAXA), Patrick Slane (Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian), Sangwook Park (University of Texas, Austin), Satoru Katsuda (Saitama University, Japan), Hidetoshi Sano (Nagoya University, Japan), Laura Lopez (The Ohio State University, Columbus), Paul Plucinsky (Center for Astrophysics), Shogo Kobayashi (Tokyo University of Science), and Kyoko Matsushita (Tokyo University of Science). The radio data were provided by Elsa Giacani from the Institute of Astronomy and Space Physics, who led a study of G344.7-0.1 published in 2011 in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center controls science from Cambridge Massachusetts and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.

Quick Look: When a Stable Star Explodes



Fast Facts for G344.7-0.1:

Scale: Image is about 17.6 arcmin (100 light years) across.
Category:
Supernovas & Supernova Remnants
Coordinates (J2000): RA 17h 03m 56s | Dec -41° 42´ 59"
Constellation:
Scorpius
Observation Date: 7 observations between May 12 and July 05, 2018
Observation Time: 33 hours 8.4 minutes (2 days, 9 hours, 8.4 minutes)
Obs. ID: 20308, 20309, 21093, 21094, 21095, 21096, 21117
Instrument:
ACIS
References: Fukushima, K., et al., 2020, ApJ, 897, 62. arXiv:2005.09664
Color Code: Multiwavelength Image: Radio (red), Infrared (green & yellow), X-ray (blue); X-ray 3 Color Image: Si (red), 3-6 keV (green), Fe (blue)
Distance Estimate: About 19,600 light years

Monday, September 06, 2021

Hubble discovers hydrogen-burning White Dwarfs enjoying slow aging-


To investigate the physics underpinning white dwarf evolution, astronomers compared cooling white dwarfs in two massive collections of stars: the globular clusters M13 and M3. These two clusters share many physical properties such as age and metallicity, but the populations of stars which will eventually give rise to white dwarfs are different. This makes M13 and M3 together a perfect natural laboratory in which to test how different populations of white dwarfs cool. Credits: Science: ESA, NASA, Giampaolo Piotto.
Release Images

Could dying stars hold the secret to looking younger? New evidence from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope suggests that white dwarf stars could continue to burn hydrogen in the final stages of their lives, causing them to appear more youthful than they actually are. This discovery could have consequences for how astronomers measure the ages of star clusters, which contain the oldest known stars in the universe.

These results challenge the prevalent view of white dwarfs as inert, slowly cooling burned-out stars where nuclear fusion has stopped. Now, an international group of astronomers has discovered the first evidence that white dwarfs can slow down their rate of aging by burning hydrogen on their surfaces.

"We have found the first observational evidence that white dwarfs can still undergo stable thermonuclear activity," explained Jianxing Chen of the Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna and the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics, who led this research. "This was quite a surprise, as it is at odds with what is commonly believed."

White dwarfs have cast off their outer layers during the last stages of their lives. They are common objects in the cosmos; roughly 98% of all the stars in the universe will ultimately end up as white dwarfs, including our own Sun. Studying these cooling stages helps astronomers understand not only white dwarfs, but also their earlier stages as well.

To investigate the physics underpinning white dwarf evolution, astronomers compared cooling white dwarfs in two massive collections of stars: the globular clusters M3 and M13. These two clusters share many physical properties such as age and metallicity (the abundance of heavier elements), but the populations of stars which will eventually give rise to white dwarfs are different. This makes M3 and M13 together a perfect natural laboratory in which to test how different populations of white dwarfs cool.

"The superb quality of our Hubble observations provided us with a full view of the stellar populations of the two globular clusters," continued Chen. "This allowed us to really contrast how stars evolve in M3 and M13."

Using Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 the team observed M3 and M13 at near-ultraviolet wavelengths, allowing them to compare more than 700 white dwarfs in the two clusters. They found that M3 contains standard white dwarfs, which are simply cooling stellar cores. M13, on the other hand, contains two populations of white dwarfs: standard white dwarfs and those which have managed to hold on to an outer envelope of hydrogen, allowing them to burn for longer and hence cool more slowly.

Comparing their results with computer simulations of stellar evolution in M13, the researchers were able to show that roughly 70% of the white dwarfs in M13 are burning hydrogen on their surfaces, slowing down the rate at which they are cooling.

This discovery could have consequences for how astronomers measure the ages of stars in the Milky Way galaxy. The evolution of white dwarfs has previously been modeled as a predictable cooling process. This relatively straightforward relationship between age and temperature has led astronomers to use the white dwarf cooling rate as a natural clock to determine the ages of star clusters, particularly globular and open clusters. However, white dwarfs burning hydrogen could cause these age estimates to be inaccurate by as much as 1 billion years.

"Our discovery challenges the definition of white dwarfs as we consider a new perspective on the way in which stars get old," added Francesco Ferraro of the Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna and the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics, who coordinated the study. "We are now investigating other clusters similar to M13 to further constrain the conditions which drive stars to maintain the thin hydrogen envelope which allows them to age slowly."

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy in Washington, D.C.

Media Contact:

Bethany Downer

ESA/Hubble.org

Ray Villard
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland

Science Contact:

Jianxing Chen
University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy

Francesco R. Ferraro
University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy


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Saturday, July 03, 2021

A White Dwarf Living on the Edge


The white dwarf ZTF J1901+1458 is about 2,670 miles across, while the moon is 2,174 miles across. The white dwarf is depicted above the Moon in this artistic representation; in reality, the white dwarf lies 130 light-years away in the constellation of Aquila. Credit: Giuseppe Parisi


Astronomers Have Identified A White Dwarf So Massive That It Might Collapse

Maunakea and Haleakala, Hawaiʻi – Astronomers have discovered the smallest and most massive white dwarf ever seen. The smoldering cinder, which formed when two less massive white dwarfs merged, is heavy, “packing a mass greater than that of our Sun into a body about the size of our Moon,” says Ilaria Caiazzo, the Sherman Fairchild Postdoctoral Scholar Research Associate in Theoretical Astrophysics at Caltech and lead author of the new study appearing in the July 1 issue of the journal Nature. “It may seem counterintuitive, but smaller white dwarfs happen to be more massive. This is due to the fact that white dwarfs lack the nuclear burning that keep up normal stars against their own self gravity, and their size is instead regulated by quantum mechanics.”

The discovery was made by the Zwicky Transient Facility, or ZTF, which operates at Caltech’s Palomar Observatory; two Hawaiʻi telescopes – W. M. Keck Observatory on Maunakea, Hawaiʻi Island and University of Hawaiʻi Institute for Astronomy’s Pan-STARRS (Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System) on Haleakala, Maui – helped characterize the dead star, along with the 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar, the European Gaia space observatory, and NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory.

White dwarfs are the collapsed remnants of stars that were once about eight times the mass of our Sun or lighter. Our Sun, for example, after it first puffs up into a red giant in about 5 billion years, will ultimately slough off its outer layers and shrink down into a compact white dwarf. About 97 percent of all stars become white dwarfs.

While our Sun is alone in space without a stellar partner, many stars orbit around each other in pairs. The stars grow old together, and if they are both less than eight solar-masses, they will both evolve into white dwarfs.

The new discovery provides an example of what can happen after this phase. The pair of white dwarfs, which spiral around each other, lose energy in the form of gravitational waves and ultimately merge. If the dead stars are massive enough, they explode in what is called a type Ia supernova. But if they are below a certain mass threshold, they combine together into a new white dwarf that is heavier than either progenitor star. This process of merging boosts the magnetic field of that star and speeds up its rotation compared to that of the progenitors.

Astronomers say that the newfound tiny white dwarf, named ZTF J1901+1458, took the latter route of evolution; its progenitors merged and produced a white dwarf 1.35 times the mass of our Sun. The white dwarf has an extreme magnetic field almost 1 billion times stronger than our Sun’s and whips around on its axis at a frenzied pace of one revolution every seven minutes (the zippiest white dwarf known, called EPIC 228939929, rotates every 5.3 minutes).

“We caught this very interesting object that wasn’t quite massive enough to explode,” says Caiazzo. “We are truly probing how massive a white dwarf can be.”

What’s more, Caiazzo and her collaborators think that the merged white dwarf may be massive enough to evolve into a neutron-rich dead star, or neutron star, which typically forms when a star much more massive than our Sun explodes in a supernova.

“This is highly speculative, but it’s possible that the white dwarf is massive enough to further collapse into a neutron star,” says Caiazzo. “It is so massive and dense that, in its core, electrons are being captured by protons in nuclei to form neutrons. Because the pressure from electrons pushes against the force of gravity, keeping the star intact, the core collapses when a large enough number of electrons are removed.”

If this neutron star formation hypothesis is correct, it may mean that a significant portion of other neutron stars take shape in this way. The newfound object’s close proximity (about 130 light-years away) and its young age (about 100 million years old or less) indicate that similar objects may occur more commonly in our galaxy.

Magnetic and Fast The white dwarf was first spotted by Caiazzo’s colleague Kevin Burdge, a postdoctoral scholar at Caltech, after searching through all-sky images captured by ZTF. This particular white dwarf, when analyzed in combination with data from Gaia, stood out for being very massive and having a rapid rotation.

“No one has systematically been able to explore short-timescale astronomical phenomena on this kind of scale until now. The results of these efforts are stunning,” says Burdge, who, in 2019, led the team that discovered a pair of white dwarfs zipping around each other every seven minutes.

The team then analyzed the spectrum of the star using Keck Observatory’s Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (LRIS), and that is when Caiazzo was struck by the signatures of a very powerful magnetic field and realized that she and her team had found something “very special,” as she says. The strength of the magnetic field together with the seven-minute rotational speed of the object indicated that it was the result of two smaller white dwarfs coalescing into one.

Data from Swift, which observes ultraviolet light, helped nail down the size and mass of the white dwarf. With a diameter of 2,670 miles, ZTF J1901+1458 secures the title for the smallest known white dwarf, edging out previous record holders, RE J0317-853 and WD 1832+089, which each have diameters of about 3,100 miles.

In the future, Caiazzo hopes to use ZTF to find more white dwarfs like this one, and, in general, to study the population as a whole. “There are so many questions to address, such as what is the rate of white dwarf mergers in the galaxy, and is it enough to explain the number of type Ia supernovae? How is a magnetic field generated in these powerful events, and why is there such diversity in magnetic field strengths among white dwarfs? Finding a large population of white dwarfs born from mergers will help us answer all these questions and more.”

The study, titled “A highly magnetised and rapidly rotating white dwarf as small as the Moon,” was funded by the Rose Hills Foundation, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, NASA, the Heising–Simons Foundation, the A. F. Morrison Fellowship of the Lick Observatory, the NSF, and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.




About LRIS

The Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (LRIS) is a very versatile and ultra-sensitive visible-wavelength imager and spectrograph built at the California Institute of Technology by a team led by Prof. Bev Oke and Prof. Judy Cohen and commissioned in 1993. Since then it has seen two major upgrades to further enhance its capabilities: the addition of a second, blue arm optimized for shorter wavelengths of light and the installation of detectors that are much more sensitive at the longest (red) wavelengths. Each arm is optimized for the wavelengths it covers. This large range of wavelength coverage, combined with the instrument’s high sensitivity, allows the study of everything from comets (which have interesting features in the ultraviolet part of the spectrum), to the blue light from star formation, to the red light of very distant objects. LRIS also records the spectra of up to 50 objects simultaneously, especially useful for studies of clusters of galaxies in the most distant reaches, and earliest times, of the universe. LRIS was used in observing distant supernovae by astronomers who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2011 for research determining that the universe was speeding up in its expansion.

About W. M. Keck Observatory

The W. M. Keck Observatory telescopes are among the most scientifically productive on Earth. The two 10-meter optical/infrared telescopes atop Maunakea on the Island of Hawaiʻi feature a suite of advanced instruments including imagers, multi-object spectrographs, high-resolution spectrographs, integral-field spectrometers, and world-leading laser guide star adaptive optics systems. Some of the data presented herein were obtained at Keck Observatory, which is a private 501(c) 3 non-profit organization operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Observatory was made possible by the generous financial support of the W. M. Keck Foundation. The authors wish to recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence that the summit of Maunakea has always had within the Native Hawaiian community. We are most fortunate to have the opportunity to conduct observations from this mountain.


Saturday, August 01, 2020

Johns Hopkins astrophysicists observe long-theorized quantum phenomena By Saralyn Cruickshank



A team led by students probes the mass-radius relation of white dwarf stars, observing in their data evidence of quantum mechanics and Einstein's theory of general relativity

At the heart of every white dwarf star—the dense stellar object that remains after a star has burned away its fuel reserve of gases as it nears the end of its life cycle—lies a quantum conundrum: as white dwarfs add mass, they shrink in size, until they become so small and tightly compacted that they cannot sustain themselves, collapsing into a neutron star.

This puzzling relationship between a white dwarf's mass and size, called the mass-radius relation, was first theorized by Nobel Prize-winning astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar in the 1930s. Now, a team of Johns Hopkins astrophysicists has developed a method to observe the phenomenon itself using astronomical data collected by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and a recent dataset released by the Gaia Space Observatory. The combined datasets provided more than 3,000 white dwarfs for the team to study.

A report of their findings, led by Hopkins senior Vedant Chandra, is now in press in Astrophysical Journal and available online on arXiv.

"The mass-radius relation is a spectacular combination of quantum mechanics and gravity, but it's counterintuitive for us—we think that as an object gains mass, it should get bigger," says Nadia Zakamska, an associate professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy who supervised the student researchers. "The theory has existed for a long time, but what's notable is that the dataset we used is of unprecedented size and unprecedented accuracy. These measurement methods, which in some cases were developed years ago, all of a sudden work so much better and these old theories can finally be probed."


The team obtained their results using a combination of measurements, including primarily the gravitational redshift effect, which is the change of wavelengths of light from blue to red as light moves away from an object. It is a direct result of Einstein's theory of general relativity.

"To me, the beauty of this work is that we all learn these theories about how light will be affected by gravity in school and in textbooks, but now we actually see that relationship in the stars themselves," says fifth-year graduate student Hsiang-Chih Hwang, who proposed the study and first recognized the gravitational redshift effect in the data.

The team also had to account for how a star's movement through space might affect the perception of its gravitational redshift. Similar to how a fire engine siren changes pitch according to its movement in relation to the person listening, light frequencies also change depending on movement of the light-emitting object in relation to the observer. This is called the Doppler effect, and is essentially a distracting "noise" that complicates the measurement of the gravitational redshift effect, says study contributor Sihao Cheng, a fourth-year graduate student.

To account for the variations caused by the Doppler effect, the team classified white dwarfs in their sample set by radius. They then averaged the redshifts of stars of a similar size, effectively determining that no matter where a star itself is located or where it's moving in relation to Earth, it can be expected to have an intrinsic gravitational redshift of a certain value. Think of it as taking an average measurement of all the pitches of all fire engines moving around in a given area at a given time—you can expect that any fire engine, no matter which direction it's moving, will have an intrinsic pitch of that average value.

These intrinsic gravitational redshift values can be used to study stars that are observed in future datasets. The researchers say that upcoming datasets that are larger and more accurate will allow for further fine-tuning of their measurements, and that this data may contribute to the future analysis of white dwarf chemical composition.

They also say their study represents an exciting advance from theory to observed phenomena.

"Because the star gets smaller as it gets more massive, the gravitational redshift effect also grows with mass," Zakamska says. "And this is a bit easier to comprehend—it's easier to get out of a less dense, bigger object than it is to get out of a more massive, more compact object. And that's exactly what we saw in the data."

The team is even finding captive audiences for their research at home—where they've conducted their work amid the coronavirus pandemic.

"The way I extolled it to my granddad is, you're basically seeing quantum mechanics and Einstein's theory of general relativity coming together to produce this result," Chandra says. "He was very excited when I put it that way."

 By Saralyn Cruickshank

Source: Johns Hopkins University