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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Neutron Star Blows Away Models for Thermonuclear Explosions
by Staff Writers
Amsterdam, Holland (SPX) Sep 15, 2011

A neutron star is the dense, core remains of an exploded star at least eight times more massive than the Sun. The neutron star contains about a sun's worth of mass packed in a sphere no larger than Toronto. In binary (double) star systems, gas from the companion star can funnel towards the neutron star, attracted by the neutron star's strong gravity. (In Image 1, the blue sphere represents the binary companion, and gas can be seen funneling toward the much smaller neutron star, which is embedded deep within the red accretion disk.) More images, movies and captions about Neutron Star as Thermonuclear Explosions at NASA

Amsterdam astronomers have discovered a neutron star that confounds existing models for thermonuclear explosions in such extreme objects. In the case of the accreting pulsar IGR J17480-2446, it seems to be a strong magnetic field that causes some parts of the star to burn more brightly than the rest.

The results of the study, by Yuri Cavecchi et al. (2011), are to be published in the journal Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The neutron star concerned is part of the X-ray binary IGR J17480-2446 (hereafter J17480). X-ray binaries consist of a neutron star and a companion star in orbit around each other.

Neutron stars, which are about 1.5 times as massive as the Sun, with a diameter of about 25 km, have a strong gravitational field that can pull gas from the companion star.

This gas can build up on the neutron star surface and explode in a fast, high-energy thermonuclear reaction. Normally, the entire surface of the star explodes uniformly.

However, in about 10 percent of cases, some parts of the star become much brighter than the rest. Why this occurs is not understood.

In recent years a number of theoretical models have been developed to explain this phenomenon. According to one model, the rapid rotation of the neutron star prevents the burning material from spreading, just as the rotation of the Earth contributes to the formation of hurricanes via the Coriolis force.

Another idea is that the explosion generates global-scale waves in the surface 'ocean' layers of the star. The ocean on one side of the star cools and dims as it rises up, while the other stays warmer and brighter.

The new study of J17480 excludes both of these models. Like other stars, J17480 develops unusually bright surface patches during thermonuclear explosions.

However the star rotates much more slowly than other neutron stars that exhibit this behavior - only 10 times per second (the next slowest rotates 245 times per second).

At this speed, the Coriolis force is not strong enough to affect the flame front, preventing the formation of thermonuclear hurricanes. The development of large-scale ocean waves can also be ruled out.

Instead, the astronomers think that the magnetic field of the star might explain the uneven burning. The exploding gas expands, moving upwards and outwards. This churns up the magnetic field, which acts like an elastic band to prevent the burning bubble from spreading any further.

"More theoretical work is needed to confirm this, but in the case of J17480 it is a very plausible explanation for our observations", says lead author Yuri Cavecchi (University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands).

Co-author Anna Watts (University of Amsterdam) stressed that their new model may not necessarily explain non-uniform burning for all stars. "The new mechanism may only work in stars like this one, with magnetic fields that are strong enough to stop the flame front from spreading. For other stars with this odd burning behavior, the old models might still apply."

Related Links
University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It




 

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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Herschel reveals how most stars formed in the Universe
Paris (ESA) Sep 14, 2011
Do galaxies form their stars through violent and tumultuous merging events or rather via more steady and gentle processes? Scrutinising thousands of galaxies across the past 11 billion years of cosmic history with ESA's Herschel Space Observatory, astronomers have, for the first time, been able to answer this long-standing question. Contrary to previous belief, the new data reveal that most of t ... read more


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