• In the eye of a stellar cyclone

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Sun Oct 11 21:30:40 2020
    In the eye of a stellar cyclone
    Student unlocks bizarre secrets of a ticking time-bomb star

    Date:
    October 11, 2020
    Source:
    University of Sydney
    Summary:
    While on COVID lockdown, a college student has written a research
    paper on a star system dubbed one of the 'exotic peacocks of the
    stellar world'.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== While on COVID lockdown, a University of Sydney honours student has
    written a research paper on a star system dubbed one of the "exotic
    peacocks of the stellar world."

    ==========================================================================
    Only one in a hundred million stars makes the cut to be classified a Wolf- Rayet: ferociously bright, hot stars doomed to imminent collapse in a
    supernova explosion leaving only a dark remnant, such as a black hole.

    Rarest of all, even among Wolf-Rayets, are elegant binary pairs that,
    if the conditions are right, are able to pump out huge amounts of carbon
    dust driven by their extreme stellar winds. As the two stars orbit one
    another, the dust gets wrapped into a beautiful glowing sooty tail. Just
    a handful of these sculpted spiral plumes has ever been discovered.

    The object of this study is the newest star to join this elite club,
    but it has been found to break all the rules.

    "Aside from the stunning image, the most remarkable things about this
    star system is the way the expansion of its beautiful dust spiral left
    us totally stumped," said Yinuo Han, who completed the research during
    his honours year in the School of Physics.

    "The dust seems to have a mind of its own, floating along much slower
    than the extreme stellar winds that should be driving it." Astronomers stumbled across this conundrum when the system was discovered two years
    ago by a team led by University of Sydney Professor Peter Tuthill. This
    star system, 8000 light years from Earth, was named Apep after the
    serpentine Egyptian god of chaos.



    ==========================================================================
    Now Mr Han's research, published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, confirms those findings and reveals Apep's bizarre physics with unprecedented detail.

    Applying high-resolution imaging techniques at the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope at Paranal in Chile, the team was able
    to probe the underlying processes that create the spiral that we observe.

    "The magnification required to produce the imagery was like seeing a
    chickpea on a table 50 kilometres away," Mr Han said.

    PRECISE MODEL The team went further than confirming the earlier discovery, producing a model that matches the intricate spiral structure for the
    first time, advancing scientists' ability to understand the extreme
    nature of these stars.



    ==========================================================================
    "The fact this relatively simple model can reproduce the spiral geometry
    to this level of detail is just beautiful," Professor Tuthill said.

    However, not all of the physics is straightforward. Mr Han's team
    confirmed that the dust spiral is expanding four times slower than the
    measured stellar winds, something unheard of in other systems.

    The leading theory to explain this bizarre behaviour makes Apep a strong contender for producing a gamma-ray burst when it does finally explode, something never before witnessed in the Milky Way.

    Dr Joe Callingham, a co-author of the study from Leiden University
    in the Netherlands, said: "There has been a flurry of research into
    Wolf-Rayet star systems: these really are the peacocks of the stellar
    world. Discoveries about these elegantly beautiful, but potentially
    dangerous objects, is causing a real buzz in astronomy." He said this
    paper was one of three to be published this year on the Apep system
    alone. Recently, the team demonstrated that Apep was not just composed of
    one Wolf-Rayet star, but in fact two. And colleagues from the Institute
    of Space and Astronautical Science in Japan will soon publish a paper
    on another system, Wolf-Rayet 112. Lead author of that paper, Ryan Lau,
    was a co-author on this paper with Mr Han.

    TIME BOMBS Wolf-Rayet stars are massive stars that have reached their
    final stable phase before going supernova and collapsing to form compact remnants such as black holes or neutron stars.

    "They are ticking time bombs," Professor Tuthill said.

    "As well as exhibiting all the usual extreme behaviour of Wolf-Rayets,
    Apep's main star looks to be rapidly rotating. This means it could have
    all the ingredients to detonate a long gamma-ray burst when it goes
    supernova." Gamma-ray bursts are among the most energetic events in the Universe. And they are potentially deadly. If a gamma-ray burst were to
    impact Earth, it could strip the planet of its precious ozone layer,
    exposing us all to ultra-violet radiation from the Sun. Fortunately,
    Apep's axis of rotation means it presents no threat to Earth.

    'MIND-BLOWING' The numbers reveal Apep's extreme nature. The two stars
    are each about 10 to 15 times more massive than the Sun and more than
    100,000 times brighter. Where the surface of our home star is about 5500 degrees, Wolf-Rayet stars are typically 25,000 degrees or more.

    According to the team's newest findings, the massive stars in the Apep
    binary orbit each other about every 125 years at a distance comparable
    to the size of our Solar System.

    "The speeds of the stellar winds produced are just mind-blowing," Mr
    Han said.

    "They are spinning off the stars about 12 million kilometres an hour;
    that's 1 percent the speed of light.

    "Yet the dust being produced by this system is expanding much more slowly,
    at about a quarter of the stellar wind speed." Mr Han said that the
    best explanation for this points to the fast-rotating nature of the stars.

    "It likely means that stellar winds are launched in different directions
    at different speeds. The dust expansion we are measuring is driven by
    slower winds launched near the star's equator," he said.

    "Our model now fits the observed data quite well, but we still haven't
    quite explained the physics of the stellar rotation." Mr Han will
    continue his astronomical studies at the University of Cambridge when
    he starts his doctorate later this year.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Sydney. Note: Content
    may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Y Han, P G Tuthill, R M Lau, A Soulain, J R Callingham, P M
    Williams, P A
    Crowther, B J S Pope, B Marcote. The extreme colliding-wind system
    Apep: resolved imagery of the central binary and dust plume in
    the infrared.

    Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2020; 498 (4):
    5604 DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa2349 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/10/201011220801.htm

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