Category Archives: updates and news

Rockin’ Stars

The 21-centimeter Band

No, it’s not the name of a punk-rock band, although I wouldn’t be surprised if some enterprising and musically inclined astrophysics grad students didn’t form a band in their “spare time” and name themselves that. There’s a great tradition of geeky names for scientist-led bands, such as the Eigenfunctions, the Algo-Rhythms, and one of my favorites, the Titan Equatorial Band, an impromptu group that featured such folks as one of my former colleagues Kelly Beatty (Sky & Telescope Magazine), Cassini Mission scientist Carolyn Porco,the late great science journalist Jonathan Eberhart, and many others. They gathered and played during Voyager spacecraft flybys.

But, that’s not the kind of band I’m talking about in this entry. The 21-centimeter Band is a wavelength of light that is more attuned to a single note: the radio frequency (1420 MHz) emitted by changes in atoms of neutral hydrogen. It’s right smack in the radio portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, and so radio astronomers have been using it for years to probe a variety of conditions in the universe.

Yesterday, I went over to Haystack Observatory to hear a talk about using 21-cm band emissions to study clouds of material being emitted from Asymptotic Giant Branch stars. These may sound like weird, far-out, geeky stars. And they are. But they’re also part of the final act in the lives of stars that are less than eight times the mass of the Sun… including the Sun. As they slip into old age, these stars cool down, they expand, they get brighter, and through all this, they spend their nuclear fuel (which is running low) faster and faster. As they cool, their atmospheres get just chilly enough that dust grains can “freeze out” and create a dusty shell around the star. Think of this phase as a last burst of lively activity before settling into very old age (not unlike the antics of some elderly rockers doing successive world tours (not that there’s anything wrong with that)).

Well, some of the larger AGB stars also start to pulsate, and these heavings send a stellar wind blowing away from the star, shoving the dusty shell out away from the star, along with a cloud of neutral hydrogen. Now, we can study the dust by looking for its signature in the infrared (where astronomers commonly detect warm (but not too hot) glowing things. And, voila, we can study the progression of the mass loss (that is, how quickly the stellar wind is shoving mass away from the star) by examining the 21-centimeter emissions from the neutral hydrogen in the shell.

Four scenes from an animation showing Mira and its 13 light-year-long tail.
Courtesy Galex Mission.

It’s still a work in progress, but we did see some fine examples of 21-centimeter emissions from the stellar tail trailing out along the line of travel of the star Mira A which looks like it’s got a comet tail. That tail is glowing in ultraviolet light, but 21-centimeter band studies show more detail in the neutral hydrogen that is also being carried along. If the work (which is still in progress) plays out as the astronomers expect, they should be able to figure out a pretty accurate timetable for when this material started streaming off the star (and hence, how old the tail is), and give us some new insights into the rockin’ activity in these geriatric stars.

Stellar Alien Speeds Away

Aliens from Other Galaxies

You know that town in Texas where the residents think they’re seeing alien UFOs (which turned out to be Air Force jets)? Well, they haven’t seen anything as alien as what the folks at the Carnegie Institution of Washington found when they did observations and analysis of a star called HE 0437-5439, a so-called “hypervelocity” star. It’s speeding away from the Milky Way, but it wasn’t born IN the Milky Way. So, astronomers studied its mass, age, and speed of the star, which is about nine times the mass of the Sun. It’s moving into intergalactic space at about 2.6 million kilometers per hour. That’s much too fast for it to have come from the Milky Way, but where DID it come from?

As it turns out, HE 0437-5439 was born in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a neighbor galaxy to the Milky Way. The Carnegie astronomers figured this out by looking at amounts of certain elements in the star. The “elemental abundances” they found point to a particular area in the Large Magellanic Cloud where similar amounts of the same elements exist. Hence the star more than likely formed in that region. So, what’s it doing speeding away from the LMC and the Milky Way? Stars don’t get up and flash out of their home galaxies just for the heck of it. They have to be kicked out by something.

The most likely scenario goes something like this: HE 0437-5439 formed as part of a binary system (a pair of stars orbiting a common center of gravity). As that pair of stars moved through space, they passed by a black hole that was about a thousand times the mass of the Sun. As we all know, black holes suck; that is, they have strong gravitational pulls. One star of the pair got pulled into the black hole, while the other got a gravitational kick that flung it out of the LMC. Now the surviving star (HE 0437-5439) is on its way to intergalatic space, leaving astronomers with an important clue that there’s at least one black hole in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Now they just have to find it. (Note: for more information, read this press release.)