A vampire star has been spotted sucking the life from its victim

Years

7 & 10

Please login to favourite this article.

A white dwarf star in the middle of a feeding frenzy sheds new insight into vampire star systems.

Suitable for Earth and Space Sciences delivery for years 7 or 10.

Word Count: 424

An artist’s impression of a vampire star system. Credit: NASA and L. Hustak (STScl)

Astronomers have found a ‘vampire’ star in the midst of a feeding frenzy, with the help of an automated program that is sifting through archived data from the decommissioned Kepler Space Telescope.

The new program acts like a detective to find clues of very fast, mysterious explosions in the Universe.

Lead researcher Ryan Ridden-Harper from ANU says the program found a dwarf nova, which comprises a white dwarf – the dense remains of a star, something our Sun will be in billions of years – gorging on a brown dwarf companion. The brown dwarf, which is 10 times less massive, is a failed star resembling a planet.

A new insight into vampire star systems

“The rare event we found was a super-outburst from the dwarf nova, which can be thought of as a vampire star system,” said Ridden-Harper.

“The incredible data from Kepler reveals a 30-day period during which the dwarf nova rapidly became 1,600 times brighter before dimming quickly and gradually returning to its normal brightness.

“The spike in brightness was caused by material stripped from the brown dwarf that’s being coiled around the white dwarf in a disk. That disk reached up to 11,700 degrees Celsius at the peak of the super-outburst.”

The program aims to find rare astronomical events that evolve rapidly, over hours or days -such as gamma ray bursts from core-collapse supernovae, colliding neutron stars or potentially those not seen before through optical telescopes.

“The discovery of this dwarf nova was unexpected, since it wasn’t what we were searching for, but it provided excellent data and new insights into these vampire star systems,” said Ridden-Harper, who made the discovery in collaboration with colleagues at ANU and the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) and the University of Notre Dame in the United States.

The hunt for more rare events

“The next steps for this project are to comb through all Kepler data and extend it to data from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, which is known as TESS,” Ridden-Harper says.

“This will give us the best understanding of the most rapid explosions in the Universe. Along the way, we might discover some rare events that no other telescope could find.”

Brad Tucker from the ANU Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, says the program has extended the use of the Kepler Space Telescope’s data to support innovative science.

“We’ve used it to see stars as they explode, the secret lives of black holes and now things previously missed – this vampire star that had been lurking in the darkness of space,” he says.

Login or Sign up for FREE to download a copy of the full teacher resource

Years: 7, 10

Topics:

Earth and Space Sciences – The Solar System, Big Bang Theory

Additional: Careers, Technology, Engineering

Concepts (South Australia):

Earth and Space Sciences – Earth in Space

Years:

7 & 10