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Dead stars 'can re-ignite' and explode | Dead stars 'can re-ignite' and explode |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Astronomers have shown that dead stars known as white dwarfs can re-ignite and explode as supernovas. | Astronomers have shown that dead stars known as white dwarfs can re-ignite and explode as supernovas. |
The discovery appears to solve a mystery surrounding the nature of a particular category of stellar explosions known as Type Ia supernovas. | The discovery appears to solve a mystery surrounding the nature of a particular category of stellar explosions known as Type Ia supernovas. |
Theorists suspected that white dwarfs could explode due to a disruptive interaction with a companion star, but lacked definitive evidence until now. | Theorists suspected that white dwarfs could explode due to a disruptive interaction with a companion star, but lacked definitive evidence until now. |
Details of the research appear in the journal Nature. | Details of the research appear in the journal Nature. |
The "smoking gun" in this case was the detection of radioactive nuclei being generated by nuclear fusion in the cosmic blast. | The "smoking gun" in this case was the detection of radioactive nuclei being generated by nuclear fusion in the cosmic blast. |
Astronomers have long had the tools to detect the signature of this fusion, but had to wait for a supernova to explode nearby in order to begin their observations. | Astronomers have long had the tools to detect the signature of this fusion, but had to wait for a supernova to explode nearby in order to begin their observations. |
Towards the end of its life, a star with the mass of the Sun will shed its outer layers as its core shrinks down to become a white dwarf. Left to their own devices, single white dwarfs will just cool off slowly over time. | Towards the end of its life, a star with the mass of the Sun will shed its outer layers as its core shrinks down to become a white dwarf. Left to their own devices, single white dwarfs will just cool off slowly over time. |
But there is a maximum mass at which a white dwarf can remain stable - a property known as the Chandrasekhar limit, after the Indian-American astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar. | But there is a maximum mass at which a white dwarf can remain stable - a property known as the Chandrasekhar limit, after the Indian-American astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar. |
If a white dwarf steals matter from a stellar companion, or collides with another white dwarf, the extra weight can compress the carbon in the star's core until this element undergoes nuclear fusion. | If a white dwarf steals matter from a stellar companion, or collides with another white dwarf, the extra weight can compress the carbon in the star's core until this element undergoes nuclear fusion. |
The carbon is fused into heavier elements with a sudden release of energy that tears the star apart. | The carbon is fused into heavier elements with a sudden release of energy that tears the star apart. |
Although Type Ia supernovas are expected to occur frequently across the Universe, they are rare occurrences in any one galaxy, with typical rates of one every few hundred years. | Although Type Ia supernovas are expected to occur frequently across the Universe, they are rare occurrences in any one galaxy, with typical rates of one every few hundred years. |
But an opportunity to observe one of these events came on 21 January 2014, when students at the University College London's teaching observatory at Mill Hill in the UK detected a type Ia supernova, later named SN2014J, in the nearby galaxy M82. | But an opportunity to observe one of these events came on 21 January 2014, when students at the University College London's teaching observatory at Mill Hill in the UK detected a type Ia supernova, later named SN2014J, in the nearby galaxy M82. |
Theorists propose that the carbon and oxygen found in a white dwarf should be fused into radioactive nickel during a supernova. | Theorists propose that the carbon and oxygen found in a white dwarf should be fused into radioactive nickel during a supernova. |
This nickel should then quickly decay into radioactive cobalt, which would itself subsequently decay, on a somewhat longer timescale, into stable iron. Type Ia supernovas that exploded long ago are the cosmic sources of the iron in the Sun, the Earth and in our blood. | |
This decay chain generates gamma-rays that give rise to bright emission from the location of the supernova. | This decay chain generates gamma-rays that give rise to bright emission from the location of the supernova. |
Eugene Churazov and colleagues studied gamma-ray data gathered by the European Space Agency's Integral spacecraft between 50 and 100 days after the explosion. | Eugene Churazov and colleagues studied gamma-ray data gathered by the European Space Agency's Integral spacecraft between 50 and 100 days after the explosion. |
By this time, Dr Churazov explained, "the white dwarf has already expanded to a size larger than our solar system". | By this time, Dr Churazov explained, "the white dwarf has already expanded to a size larger than our solar system". |
He told BBC News: "The envelope of ejecta (debris) is semi-transparent, so no matter where the gamma-rays are produced, they are able to escape through the ejecta with a probability on the order of 60-70%." | He told BBC News: "The envelope of ejecta (debris) is semi-transparent, so no matter where the gamma-rays are produced, they are able to escape through the ejecta with a probability on the order of 60-70%." |
They looked for - and found - the signature of cobalt decay in the profile of gamma-ray emission from the supernova. Moreover, the observed amount of gamma-ray emission was also an excellent match for theoretical models of a white dwarf explosion. | They looked for - and found - the signature of cobalt decay in the profile of gamma-ray emission from the supernova. Moreover, the observed amount of gamma-ray emission was also an excellent match for theoretical models of a white dwarf explosion. |
However, the researchers were not able to distinguish between the two theoretical scenarios for the initiation of a white dwarf supernova. | However, the researchers were not able to distinguish between the two theoretical scenarios for the initiation of a white dwarf supernova. |
Dr Churazov explained: "It is perfectly consistent with the simplest scenario, of a single white dwarf with a mass close to the Chandrasekhar limit. But we cannot exclude with this data that this event was caused by a merger [of two white dwarfs]." | Dr Churazov explained: "It is perfectly consistent with the simplest scenario, of a single white dwarf with a mass close to the Chandrasekhar limit. But we cannot exclude with this data that this event was caused by a merger [of two white dwarfs]." |
In a viewpoint piece in the same edition of Nature, Robert P Kirshner, from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts, wrote: "Upsetting the conventional wisdom is always a joy in science. You can get prizes for that." | In a viewpoint piece in the same edition of Nature, Robert P Kirshner, from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts, wrote: "Upsetting the conventional wisdom is always a joy in science. You can get prizes for that." |
But, he explained, "there is also a deep pleasure in showing decisive evidence on an important physical idea that has been used without proof for decades," adding: "It is a wonderful result." | But, he explained, "there is also a deep pleasure in showing decisive evidence on an important physical idea that has been used without proof for decades," adding: "It is a wonderful result." |
Follow Paul on Twitter. | Follow Paul on Twitter. |
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