white dwarfs – One Universe at a Time https://briankoberlein.com Brian Koberlein Thu, 21 Feb 2019 22:09:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.1 The Attraction Of A Star https://briankoberlein.com/2017/06/15/the-attraction-of-a-star/ https://briankoberlein.com/2017/06/15/the-attraction-of-a-star/#comments Thu, 15 Jun 2017 11:00:12 +0000 https://briankoberlein.com/?p=6666

New observations of a white dwarf prove Chandrasekhar's model right using an experiment of his most bitter rival.

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In 1919 Arthur Eddington traveled to the island of Principe off the coast of West Africa to photograph a total eclipse. Mission was to observe the apparent shift of nearby stars by the Sun’s gravity. His experiment was a success, and it verified Einstein’s gravitational theory of general relativity. Since then, we have observed the gravitational deflection of starlight by the Sun numerous times. We have also seen the deflection of the light from distant galaxies, but we haven’t seen the deflection of distant starlight by another star. The gravitational effect of a single star is extraordinarily small. But recently a team has observed the deflection of starlight by a single white dwarf star.

The white dwarf is known as Stein 2051 B, and it’s been in the middle of a controversy for nearly a century. White dwarfs are formed with a star such as our Sun runs out of the hydrogen necessary to generate heat and pressure through nuclear fusion. The star collapses under its own weight until it reaches a point where the pressure of electrons keeps it from collapsing any further. White dwarfs have the mass of a star, but are about the size of Earth. This small size makes them difficult to study.

In 1930, a 19-year old named Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar calculated the theoretical structure of white dwarfs. Similar models were developed by Wilhelm Anderson and E. C. Stoner, but Chandrasekhar’s was more accurate, and included the calculation of an upper limit to the mass of white dwarf, now known as the Chandrasekhar limit. His model was highly controversial, and Eddington was one of the biggest opponents of the model. As astronomers found more examples of white dwarfs, it became clear that Chandrasekhar’s model worked. But Stein 2051 B seemed to be an exception. It has a distant companion star that allowed us to get a rough idea of its mass and it seemed that Stein 2051 B had a mass that is much smaller than most white dwarfs. This would imply it has some strange structure such a s a large iron core.

A schematic of the gravitational lensing effect. Credit: Wikipedia

But then in 2014 the white dwarf happened to pass in front of a more distant star, as seen from Earth. This allowed astronomers to observe the effects of gravitational lensing by the white dwarf. Using data from the Hubble Space Telescope, the team analyzed the gravitational deflection of the distant star. Using general relativity, they then calculated the size and mass of the white dwarf. They found it has a mass of 0.675 solar masses, which is larger than previously thought and well within the typical range of a white dwarf. So Stein 2051 B doesn’t have an exotic composition after all.

Arthur Eddington was an extremely prominent astronomer, and his opposition to the young upstart’s model meant it gained little traction early on. But the good thing about science is that in the end the data rules. It is perhaps poetic justice that Chandrasekhar’s model has been vindicated by the very experiment Eddington so famously first used.

Paper: Kailash C. Sahu, et al. Relativistic deflection of background starlight measures the mass of a nearby white dwarf star. Science
DOI: 10.1126/science.aal2879 (2017)

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The Little Star That Could https://briankoberlein.com/2017/02/09/the-little-star-that-could/ https://briankoberlein.com/2017/02/09/the-little-star-that-could/#comments Thu, 09 Feb 2017 14:36:50 +0000 https://briankoberlein.com/?p=6472

Pulsars are usually neutron stars, but we now know they can also be a white dwarf.

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A pulsar is a star that emits a regular pulse of energy, usually on the order of a few seconds up to hundreds of times a second. They were first discovered by Jocelyn Bell in 1967, and since then we’ve found more than 1,500 of them. While their source was once a mystery, we now know that they are caused by rotating neutron stars. All the pulsars we’ve found have been neutron stars, but does a pulsar have to be a neutron star? Nope, it turns out white dwarfs can be pulsars too. 

Animation of a pulsar. Credit: Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics

Pulsars are produced when the strong magnetic fields of these stars interact with surrounding plasma to create beams of energy that stream out from the magnetic poles of a neutron star. When the magnetic poles of a neutron star are tilted a bit from its axis of rotation, the beams of energy can sweep around like a lighthouse. If a beam sweeps in the direction of Earth, we see it as a regular pulse.

Neutron stars make good pulsars because they are incredibly dense. A neutron star about twice the mass of our Sun would only be about 20 kilometers across. This means the magnetic field of a neutron star can be incredibly strong, since it is packed into such a small size, and it’s the magnetic field that makes the energy beams so powerful.

It’s long been speculated, however, that white dwarfs could also become pulsars. A white dwarf is similar to a neutron star, but instead of being collapsed down to the size of a small city, its stellar mass is compressed to about the size of Earth. White dwarfs aren’t as dense as neutron stars, and their magnetic fields aren’t quite as strong, but they are still strong enough to produce beams of energy from their magnetic poles. The problem is that a white dwarf pulsar would be harder to find, since their energy beams aren’t as strong and they would tend to rotate more slowly. But a team of astronomers thinks they’ve found one.

Artist animation of AR Scorpii. Credit: ESO

AR Scorpii is a binary system containing a red dwarf about half the mass of our Sun, and a white dwarf of roughly a solar mass. They are separated by a distance only 3 times that of the Earth to the Moon, and orbit each other every 3.6 hours. This kind of binary system is relatively common, but the team noticed the red dwarf was behaving unusually. The red dwarf pulses every two minutes. This is too fast for the variation to be due to the physics of the red dwarf itself. When the team analyzed the pulsations, they found it was highly polarized, which is the kind of thing that happens when material is illuminated by high energy beams. The kind of energy beams created by pulsars. It turns out that the white dwarf produces pulsar-like beams, and these sweep across the red dwarf, accelerating electrons in its upper atmosphere. The electrons then produce a pulse of ultraviolet, visible and radio light that we can observe here on Earth.

So this is the first example of a white dwarf acting like a pulsar, which is pretty cool.

Paper: Buckley, D. A. H. et al. Polarimetric evidence of a white dwarf pulsar in the binary system AR Scorpii. Nat. Astron. 1, 0029 (2017).

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Not With A Bang But A Whimper https://briankoberlein.com/2016/02/09/not-bang-whimper/ https://briankoberlein.com/2016/02/09/not-bang-whimper/#comments Tue, 09 Feb 2016 15:37:38 +0000 https://briankoberlein.com/?p=5731

As it runs out of usable hydrogen to sustain it, the Sun will expand into a red giant for a time, and then what matter it has remaining will collapse into a white dwarf. And then what?

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While large stars end their lives as brilliant supernovae, our Sun will face a much quieter end. As it runs out of usable hydrogen to sustain it, the Sun will expand into a red giant for a time, and then what matter it has remaining will collapse into a white dwarf. And then what?

When a white dwarf forms it is extremely hot. The initial surface temperature of a white dwarf is about a million Kelvin. This makes them extremely bright for their tiny size. But unlike main sequence stars that maintain their heat through nuclear fusion, white dwarfs rely upon electron pressure to keep themselves from collapsing under their own weight. They have no way to generate heat on their own, and so they simply radiate away heat and light, gradually cooling to become a black dwarf.

It’s estimated that it would take a thousand trillion (1015) years for a white dwarf to become a black dwarf, which is much longer than the mere billions of years our Sun will shine as a main sequence star. This assumes there is no other mechanism to heat a white dwarf. In models of dark matter, dark matter particles would interact with the regular matter of the white dwarf, keeping it warm, perhaps a trillion times longer. Over that time scale, if protons are unstable their decay could extend the cooling time a bit more.

But all that would simply delay the inevitable. As the universe continues to expand and cool, our Sun and other white dwarfs will be among the last beacons of light before fading into the cold and dark.

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Reading Between the Lines https://briankoberlein.com/2014/10/08/reading-lines/ https://briankoberlein.com/2014/10/08/reading-lines/#respond Wed, 08 Oct 2014 11:00:53 +0000 https://briankoberlein.com/?p=3941

Yesterday I talked about the Higgs, and how its discovery has led to a flurry of articles about how it might apply to astrophysics. So today here's another example, and this one's interesting because it's not simply trying to use the Higgs to explain known phenomena, it's trying to use astronomical observations to understand things about the Higgs. It comes from a paper recently published in the Astrophysical Journal, and concerns the spectra of white dwarf stars.

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Yesterday I talked about the Higgs, and how its discovery has led to a flurry of articles about how it might apply to astrophysics. So today here’s another example, and this one’s interesting because it’s not simply trying to use the Higgs to explain known phenomena, it’s trying to use astronomical observations to understand things about the Higgs. It comes from a paper recently published in the Astrophysical Journal, and concerns the spectra of white dwarf stars.

As you might recall, a white dwarf is the remnant of a solar-mass star that has exhausted its ability to fuse elements in its core. Without a source of heat, the star is compressed by gravity to the point where only the pressure of electrons in atoms can prevent it from collapsing further. When our own Sun eventually dies, it will become a white dwarf roughly the size of Earth. The nice thing about white dwarfs is they usually still have remaining heat from their formation, so they glow brilliant white. This means we can observe the light emitted by them fairly easily. We can even observe the line spectra of white dwarfs, which we can use for things like testing general relativity.

Typically when we talk about emission lines, we mean the ones caused by electrons shifting their position in an atom or molecule, but there are also emission lines due to protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom. These latter lines are similar to the usual emission lines, but they are governed by the strong nuclear force rather than the electromagnetic force. Studying nuclear emission lines lets us understand the behavior of nuclear forces.

That’s where white dwarfs come in. The emission spectra of white dwarfs contain both traditional emission lines due to electrons, and nuclear emission lines due to protons and neutrons. The reason this is important is that protons and neutrons are much more massive than electrons, so the Higgs field interacts with them differently. As a result, any shift in the behavior of the Higgs will affect the nuclear line spectra differently than the regular one.

What the authors are interested in is whether the Higgs interacts with strong gravitational fields. That isn’t something that we can currently test in the lab, but it could be seen in the strong gravity of a white dwarf. In analyzing white dwarf spectra, the authors find no evidence of any Higgs-gravity interactions, but they are able to determine an upper limit on the strength of any such interaction.

Mainly this work is a proof of concept. Given combination of high-density mass and strong gravitational fields seen in objects like white dwarfs and neutron stars, Higgs interactions may play a role in their evolution and behavior. It is something we can at least try to look for, and this is a first step in that direction.

Paper: Roberto Onofrio and Gary A. Wegner. Search for Higgs Shifts in White Dwarfs. ApJ 791 125 (2014)

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Dying Embers https://briankoberlein.com/2014/08/04/dying-embers/ https://briankoberlein.com/2014/08/04/dying-embers/#comments Mon, 04 Aug 2014 19:00:42 +0000 https://briankoberlein.com/?p=3594

Determining the age of galaxies and globular clusters can be a bit of a challenge. There are several ways you can get a handle on galactic age. One of these is by looking at the ratio of red dwarf stars to larger stars. Red dwarf stars burn very slowly, so their lifetimes can be 100 billion years or more. Given that the universe is only about 14 billion years old, this means that red dwarfs haven’t had time to die off. Larger stars die off faster, so the higher the proportion of red dwarf stars, the older the galaxy should be.

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Determining the age of galaxies and globular clusters can be a bit of a challenge. There are several ways you can get a handle on galactic age. One of these is by looking at the ratio of red dwarf stars to larger stars. Red dwarf stars burn very slowly, so their lifetimes can be 100 billion years or more. Given that the universe is only about 14 billion years old, this means that red dwarfs haven’t had time to die off. Larger stars die off faster, so the higher the proportion of red dwarf stars, the older the galaxy should be.

Of course this assumes that all the stars in a galaxy formed around the same time. While this is generally true for star clusters, and to a lesser degree for globular clusters, it isn’t very accurate for galaxies. In galaxies, the largest stars will go supernova, scattering gas and dust that mix with other stellar remnants to collapse into new stellar nurseries. Thus galaxies can produce new generations of stars from old ones. You can still use the red dwarf count to estimate age, but this method isn’t as accurate with galaxies as it is with globular clusters.

Another method is to look at what is known as the metallicity of the stars in a galaxy. In astrophysics, we generally refer to any element other than hydrogen and helium as “metals”. The reason for this is that the amount hydrogen and helium in the universe dwarfs all the other elements combined, so we can put them in the “other” category. The metallicity of a star is a measure of the fraction of metal (in the astrophysics sense) a star has compared to hydrogen and helium.

Metals can only be produced in the cores of stars, so if a star has a high metallicity it must have been formed from the remnants of earlier stars. Stars with low metallicity have formed mainly from the original hydrogen and helium of the universe. So high metallicity stars are younger than low metallicity ones. In this way you can distinguish the initial stars in a galaxy from subsequent generations of stars. This gives you another handle on the age of a galaxy or globular cluster.

There is a third way to determine the age of a galaxy, known as the white dwarf luminosity function. White dwarfs are the remnants of stars like our Sun. If a star is too small to become a supernova when it dies, it will swell to a red giant, casting of some of its outer material before collapsing to a white dwarf. White dwarfs have three important properties that make them very useful in determining the age of a galaxy.

The first is that white dwarfs are generally about the mass of the Sun. There’s a limit to how massive a white dwarf can be (known as the Chandrasekhar limit), of about 1.4 solar masses. If a stellar remnant has more mass than that it will collapse to a neutron star. If it has much less mass than that of the Sun, then it is likely a red dwarf that hasn’t had time to die off yet.

The second is that white dwarfs also have the same general size (about that of Earth). Their size is determined by the pressure of free electrons pushing against each other (a quantum effect known as electron degeneracy pressure). This means their size doesn’t vary with the star’s temperature.

The third is that they form at a temperature of about a million Kelvin. Since white dwarfs have no way to generate heat within themselves, this means they cool over time by radiating light. The amount of radiant heat they emit depends on its temperature and its size.

So white dwarfs have roughly the same temperature and size when they are formed, and they cool via radiation at a rate that depends on their temperature and size. This means you can determine the age of a white dwarf by measuring its temperature. Since hotter white dwarfs are brighter than cooler ones, you can determine their temperature by observing their brightness (or luminosity). The white dwarf luminosity function of a galaxy is the distribution of the luminosities of the white dwarfs in the galaxy. By looking at this function, you can determine not only the age of the oldest white dwarfs, but also the rate at which white dwarfs have formed.

White dwarfs cool rather slowly. As a result most of them are still relatively bright, so they can be observed fairly easily despite their small size. You can see an image of these white dwarfs in a globular cluster in the figure above. Even though they are not as bright as most of the other stars, their high temperature gives them a distinctive bluish hue that makes them easy to distinguish.

White dwarfs are like cosmic cooling embers. In their dying glow is the evidence of the fires of stellar formation, and their glow tells us just how long ago those fires burned.

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