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Astronomers Find New Evidence for the Violent Demise of Sun-likeStars (Forwarded)



 
 
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Old July 22nd 05, 03:33 PM
Andrew Yee
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Default Astronomers Find New Evidence for the Violent Demise of Sun-likeStars (Forwarded)

University News Services
Rochester Institute of Technology
Rochester, New York

Contact:
Susan Galowicz, Univ. of Rochester/RIT
585-475-5061,

Science Contact:
Joel H. Kastner,


Release Date: May 31, 2005

Astronomers Find New Evidence for the Violent Demise of Sun-like Stars

Two astronomers have used NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory to discover a
shell of superheated gas around a dying star in the Milky Way galaxy.

Joel Kastner, professor of imaging science at the Rochester Institute of
Technology, and Rodolpho Montez, a graduate student in physics and
astronomy at the University of Rochester, will present their results today
at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Minneapolis.

Their discovery shows how material ejected at two million miles per hour
during the final, dying stages of sun-like stars can heat previously
ejected gas to the point where it will emit X-rays. The study also offers
new insight into how long the ejected gas around dying stars can persist
in such a superheated state.

According to Kastner, the hot gas shows up in high-resolution Chandra
X-ray images of the planetary nebula NGC 40, which is located about 3,000
light years away from Earth in the direction of the constellation Cepheus.

"Planetary nebulae are shells of gas ejected by dying stars," Kastner
explains. "They offer astronomers a 'forecast' of what could happen to our
own sun about five billion years from now -- when it finally exhausts the
reservoir of hydrogen gas at its core that presently provides its source
of nuclear power."

In his research, Montez discovered the X-ray emitting shell in NGC 40 by
generating an image that uses only specific energy-selected X-rays --
revealing a ring of superheated gas that lies just within the portions of
the nebula that appear in optical and infrared images.

"This hot bubble of gas vividly demonstrates how, as a planetary nebula
forms, the gas ejection process of the central, dying star becomes
increasingly energetic," Kastner notes. "Mass ejection during stellar
death can result in violent collisions that can heat the ejected gas up to
temperatures of more than a million degrees."

The detection of X-rays from NGC 40 adds to a growing list of such
discoveries by Chandra and its European counterpart, the XMM-Newton X-ray
satellite observatory. Kastner and Montez (along with collaborators Orsola
de Marco, of the American Museum of Natural History in New York, and Noam
Soker, of the Technion Institute in Haifa, Israel) have studied these
previous X-ray observations of planetary nebulae, and find that the X-ray
and infrared output of such objects is closely coupled.

"The connection between X-ray and infrared emission seems to show that the
hot bubble phase is restricted to early times in stellar death, when a
planetary nebula is quite young and the dust within it is still relatively
warm," says Montez about his observations.

The correspondence indicates that the production of superheated gas is a
short-lived phase in the life of a planetary nebula, although Kastner
cautions that additional Chandra and XMM-Newton observations are required
to test this idea.

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala., manages the Chandra
program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Northrop
Grumman of Redondo Beach, Calif., was the prime development contractor for
the observatory. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory controls
science and flight operations from the Chandra X-ray Center in Cambridge,
Mass.

Additional information and images are available at:

http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2005/n40/
and
http://chandra.nasa.gov

 




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