Skip to main content

The Hubble telescope showed the brightest star Sirius A and its faint, tiny stellar companion Sirius B together.

 



The Hubble Space Telescope has produced a image of Sirius A and its faint companion Sirius B, two stars in our night sky. At the center of the image is the brightest star in the night sky, Sirius A.To the bottom left we can see the tiny dot of Sirius B, which would’ve gone undetected without its overexposure. The cross-shaped diffraction spikes and concentric rings around Sirius A,and the small ring around Sirius B are artifacts produced by the telescope’s imaging system.


The two stars are in a binary star system, meaning they revolve around each other in an elliptical orbit every 50 years. Sirius A is located 8.6 light-years away from Earth and is the fifth closest star system known. Sirius B is a white dwarf star, a small remnant of a star similar to our sun that has exhausted its nuclear fuel sources and collapsed down to a fraction of its original size. It is 10,000 times fainter than Sirius A and its feeble light makes it very hard to observe from Earth.


Fortunately for us, the Hubble Space Telescope has come to the rescue! The telescope’s Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) was able to capture enough light from Sirius B to disperse it into a spectrum. This allowed astronomers to measure the light being stretched by the white dwarf’s powerful gravitational pull and calculate its mass at 98 percent that of the sun. Further analysis of Sirius B’s spectrum also revealed its surface temperature to be around 44,900 degrees Fahrenheit (25,200 degrees Kelvin).


Accurately determining the mass of white dwarfs is essential for understanding stellar evolution and a variety of other cosmological phenomena. White dwarfs are the remnants of stars that have exhausted all their nuclear fuel, and are incredibly dense objects. They are also the source of Type Ia supernova explosions, which are used because of their immense brightness to measure the distance to distant galaxies and the expansion rate of the universe. Furthermore, measurements based on Type Ia supernovae are fundamental to understanding “dark energy”, a mysterious repulsive force that drives the universe apart.


The method of accurately determining the mass of a white dwarf relies on one of the key predictions of Einstein’s theory of General Relativity: that light loses energy when it attempts to escape the gravitational pull of a compact star. This effect is known as gravitational redshift of light. To measure this effect, Oct. 15, 2003, astronomers use the Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 to capture detailed images of white dwarfs. From these images, they can measure the position of Sirius B, and use that information to point the STIS (Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph) instrument exactly on the white dwarf, allowing them to make precise measurements of its gravitational redshift and mass.


The importance of accurately determining the mass of white dwarfs cannot be overstated. Not only does this enable us to better understand stellar evolution (as our own sun will eventually become a white dwarf), but it is also essential for elaborating our understanding of dark energy and for measuring the expansion rate of the universe. Without an accurate measurement of a white dwarf’s mass, we would not be able to make precise observations about our universe and its history. Thus, white dwarf mass determinations remain one of the key pieces in unlocking cosmological mysteries.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

In the triple-star system, KOI-5Ab is seen orbiting the primary star...

  KOI-5Ab continues to be a topic of discussion for researchers, as koi-5Ab has been seen orbiting the primary Star, confirming it has also been announced.  koi-5ab revolves around the primary star, it was thought to be a planet half the size of Saturn in a planetary system, and was the only other planet candidate to be detected by the KOI-5Ab mission. Kepler mission operations were initiated by NASA in 2009, by the end of spacecraft operations in 2018, the Kepler spacecraft had discovered 2,394 exoplanets, or planets orbiting stars beyond our sun, and about 2,366 exoplanets such  There are also those, which are still to be confirmed. David Ciardi, chief scientist at NASA's Exoplanet Science Institute, says the KOI-5AB was abandoned, because it was complicated, and we had thousands of candidates, and we were learning something new every day from Kepler, so that the KOI  Mostly forgot to -5. KOI-5Ab is part of the Triple Star system, where KOI-5 is a group of three st...

NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope will be closed.

NASA briefly informed that the Spitzer Space Telescope will be permanently discontinued on January 30, 2020. After about 16 years of discovering the universe in light energy.  And by that time, the space shuttle has been working for more than 11 years beyond its prime mission, Spitzer examines the universe's various objects in infrared light.  It was in 2003 through the rocket that the American Space Research Organization NASA entered the space and entered the orbit around the Earth.  Spitzer rotates the sun on a path similar to that of the Earth but it runs a bit slower.  Today it is about 158 ​​million miles (254 million kilometers) away from our planet - more than 600 times the distance between Earth and Moon.  The spacing of Spitzer's orbit curve means that when the spacecraft indicates its fixed antenna on the earth to download data or receive commands, its solar panels tend to lean away from the sun.  During those periods, to operate the space shut...

SpaceX is launching its next dragon spacecraft.

SpaceX is preparing for its next mission, very soon Spacex will launch the Dragon Spacecraft with its Falcon 9 Rocket.   SpaceX is the 18th commercial reproduction service mission, dragon spacecraft will be loaded with dozens of experiments made in space.  Launch date: Sunday, July 21, 2019 at 7:35 pm  International Space Station (ISS) us  The National Laboratory SpaceX's dragon is giving a finalization to more than two dozen payloads for launch in a circular circular laboratory.  Many of these payloads are aimed at improving human health on the earth, many of which are focused on drug development.  In addition, a series of payloads from identified private sector partners will be launched on this mission.  More than 40 student experiments and demonstrations have been included on the 18th Commercial Recepti Services Mission (CRS-18) of SpaceX.  One part of ISS American National Laboratory's goal is to encourage and engage next generation scientists.                          ...