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White dwarf star stealing gas from a companion
(NASA/CXC/M.Weiss) |
When it comes to going out with style, nothing comes close to the end of a white dwarf. Their thermonuclear self-destruction ranks among the most powerful explosions in the cosmos, forcing the star to wink out of existence in a blaze of glory.
At least, that's the idea. A discovery confirms some
white dwarfs fake their deaths with a lackluster performance, only to go on
shining even brighter than before.
Ten years ago, supernova SN 2012Z was spotted in the
nearby spiral galaxy NGC 1309, glowing briefly in a swan song that should, by
all accounts, herald its annihilation.
Images of its home galaxy went back for years prior,
so working out which star went bang simply required studying follow-up images
to spot the now empty spaces.
"We were expecting to see one of two things when
we got the most recent Hubble data. Either the star would have completely gone
away, or maybe it would have still been there, meaning the star we saw in the
pre-explosion images wasn't the one that blew up," says UC Santa Barbara
astronomer Curtis McCully.
"Nobody was expecting to see a surviving star
that was brighter. That was a real puzzle."
As unexpected as it was, the observation wasn't
entirely without precedent, contributing to a growing pile of evidence that
life after death might not be such an odd thing for white dwarf stars.
Once a star with our Sun's mass squeezes its last
dregs of helium into carbon and oxygen, it collapses into a dense, white-hot
sphere the size of our Earth. Without the mass to build bigger elements, it
simmers away, cooling over the eons until eventually dimming into a cold, black
lump.
If such a depleted stellar core has a generous companion
star orbiting nearby, life might go on a smidge longer as it siphons off a
little extra gas.
At a critical point, however, all that extra mass
risks pushing the carbon into fusion, sparking a runaway reaction that
unleashes a tremendous amount of energy in a blink, tearing the star apart in
what's known as a Type Ia supernova.
Usually, there's nothing of note left in the space
once occupied by the white dwarf – just an expanding cloud of star guts
drifting out into the cosmos, faintly glowing with residual radiation.
These specific blasts are so clockwork they all burn
at roughly the same brilliance, making them handy for gauging distances across
the Universe.
Yet not all explosions are so standard. The more
common Type Iax supernova are less like fireworks and more like damp squibs,
popping slowly in a comparatively dull whimper.
They might not even be all that destructive, with
signs of high-density matter with hallmarks of a thick photosphere spotted in
the aftermath of a handful of these less impressive supernovae.
Color images of NGC 1309 both before and after SN
2012Z. The left panel shows the Hubble Heritage (pre-explosion) image of NGC
1309. The top-middle panel shows a zoom-in on the position of the supernova
from the pre-explosion image. The top-right shows SN~2012Z from the 2013 visit.
The middle-bottom panel shows the location of SN~2012Z in the latest
observations in 2016. The bottom-right panel shows the difference image between
the pre-explosion images and the observations from 2016. |
Finding SN 2012Z radiating furiously after its own
supernova leaves little doubt that in some, if not many cases, white dwarfs can
remain intact even after going thermonuclear.
Exactly why this particular star not only fell short
of ripping itself apart but happened to come back even brighter is something of
a mystery. The researchers behind the discovery speculate the blast merely
stirred things up, allowing its material to settle back into a less dense, more
puffed-up form.
With a larger volume, the cooling remains of the white
dwarf would look even more radiant than ever.
"The implications for Type Ia supernovae are
profound," says McCully.
"We've found that supernovae at least can grow to
the limit and explode. Yet the explosions are weak, at least some of the time.
Now we need to understand what makes a supernova fail and become a Type Iax,
and what makes one successful as a Type Ia."
Reference: Reserach paper
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