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Pre-Supernova White Dwarf Uncovered by Hubble Team (Forwarded)



 
 
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Old January 14th 06, 06:25 AM posted to sci.astro
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Default Pre-Supernova White Dwarf Uncovered by Hubble Team (Forwarded)

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January 9, 2006

Pre-Supernova White Dwarf Uncovered by Hubble Team, Led by Villanova
University Astronomer Edward Sion

Astronomers today are reporting the first detection of direct radiation
from the surface of a white dwarf star in a pre-supernova binary star
system using the Hubble Space Telescope. This is a major step forward in
identifying the type of star that will become a Type Ia supernova, the
type of supernova that is being used to show that the expansion of the
universe is accelerating. These binary objects, called AM Cvn stars,
have virtually pure helium in their outer layers, and are considered
among the strongest progenitor candidates for the occurrence of Type Ia
supernovae, the kind of supernova which are used as "standard candles"
to measure the size of our Universe, and being used to show that the
expansion of the Universe is speeding up instead of slowing down. The
Hubble team is led by Dr. Edward Sion of Villanova University and
includes Dr. Paula Szkody of the University of Washington, Seattle,
Dr.Jan-Erik Solheim of the University of Oslo, Norway, Dr. Boris
Gaensicke, the University of Warwick, England and Dr. Steve Howell of
the National Optical Astronomical Observatories, Tucson.

The team is presenting the results of their computer modeling of the
Hubble data at the 207th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in
Washington, DC. Their work has been accepted for publication in an
upcoming issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The extremely dense, planet-sized white dwarf star is normally
surrounded by a swirling disk of helium gas from a very close
helium-rich lighter weight donor star. The Hubble Team observed the
object during a brief time when the helium disk hiding the white dwarf,
temporarily goes away.

A mere teaspoonful of the white dwarf's matter weighs over 100 tons.
This heavy weight white dwarf and the lighter weight helium-rich donor
star whirl around each other in a stellar dance every 28 minutes. In
order for Type Ia supernovae to be used as proper reliable standard
candles, we must understand what kind of star exploded. This white dwarf
detection helps provide this information.

The Team demonstrates that the pre-supernova object is much cooler and
more slowly spinning than predicted by theory. The white dwarf's surface
chemistry is laden with heavy metals. In the pre-supernova binary,
helium is being transferred from the lightest, largest star to the
heaviest, smallest star as they orbit each other every 28 minutes. In
most cases the accretion of mass by the heaviest star proceeds via a
nearly pure helium accretion disk, At present, only about 10 such double
nearly pure helium white dwarf systems are known. But recent estimates
predict enough to account for the observed rate of Type Ia supernovae.
This first spectroscopic detection of the white dwarf in a AM CVn system
allows us to directly find for the first time the chemical makeup, spin
rate, and mass of the white dwarf as well as estimating how fast helium
is accumulating onto the primary white dwarf.

These objects can undergo a Type Ia supernova explosions without
requiring that the white dwarf star first reach its maximum possible
mass, the so-called Chandrasekhar limit. If the incoming helium
accumulates slowly enough onto the heavier white dwarf, it will
gradually compress or crush the matter below, triggering a helium
thermonuclear explosion which will cause the carbon in the core of the
white dwarf to detonate 10,000,000 times more violently as a Type Ia
supernova. This process called edge-lit detonation (ELD) will occur in
an AM CVn system at low enough accretion rates and slow enough
rotational velocities.

The AM CVn binary systems are also the only known source of low
frequency gravitational waves predicted by Einstein's theory of general
relativity.

When the two compact stars in an AM CV binary system revolve around each
other, they lose energy and angular momentum through the emission of
gravitational waves, at the expense of their own orbital energy. This
causes their orbits to shrink ever further. The orbit shrinkage has been
observed in binary radiopulsars, e.g. in the famous Hulse-Taylor pulsar
PSR B1913+16 (Nobel Prize in Physics 1993) but there has never yet been
a direct detection of gravitational waves. AM CVn systems binary white
dwarfs are expected to be the dominant sources of gravitational waves to
be detected by LISA, the laser interferometer in space which is due for
launch be launch early in the next decade.
 




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