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Related: About this forumVampire Star System Undergoing Super-Outburst Witnessed by Kepler Spacecraft
Vampire Star System Undergoing Super-Outburst Witnessed by Kepler Spacecraft
By NASA'S GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER JANUARY 25, 2020
This illustration shows a newly discovered dwarf nova system, in which a white dwarf star is pulling material off a brown dwarf companion. The material collects into an accretion disk until reaching a tipping point, causing it to suddenly increase in brightness. Using archival Kepler data, a team observed a previously unseen, and unexplained, gradual intensification followed by a super-outburst in which the system brightened by a factor of 1,600 over less than a day. Credit: NASA and L. Hustak (STScI)
NASAs Kepler spacecraft was designed to find exoplanets by looking for stars that dim as a planet crosses the stars face. Fortuitously, the same design makes it ideal for spotting other astronomical transients objects that brighten or dim over time. A new search of Kepler archival data has uncovered an unusual super-outburst from a previously unknown dwarf nova. The system brightened by a factor of 1,600 over less than a day before slowly fading away.
The star system in question consists of a white dwarf star with a brown dwarf companion about one-tenth as massive as the white dwarf. A white dwarf is the leftover core of an aging Sun-like star and contains about a Suns worth of material in a globe the size of Earth. A brown dwarf is an object with a mass between 10 and 80 Jupiters that is too small to undergo nuclear fusion.
The brown dwarf circles the white dwarf star every 83 minutes at a distance of only 250,000 miles (400,000 km) about the distance from Earth to the Moon. They are so close that the white dwarfs strong gravity strips material from the brown dwarf, sucking its essence away like a vampire. The stripped material forms a disk as it spirals toward the white dwarf (known as an accretion disk).
It was sheer chance that Kepler was looking in the right direction when this system underwent a super-outburst, brightening by more than 1,000 times. In fact, Kepler was the only instrument that could have witnessed it, since the system was too close to the Sun from Earths point of view at the time. Keplers rapid cadence of observations, taking data every 30 minutes, was crucial for catching every detail of the outburst.
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(24,505 posts)30 years ago, it would have been world news, today, I see it on DU. Thanks so much.