Red Explosions: Secret Life of Binary Stars Is Revealed
Posted on January 25, 2013 at 07:05:41 am
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Theoretical astrophysicist Natalia Ivanova says researchers have long debated about what happens when binary stars, two stars that orbit one another, come together in a "common envelope."
"When this dramatic cannibalizing event ends there are two possible outcomes: the two stars merge into a single star or an initial binary transforms into an exotic short-period one," said Ivanova.
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The event is believed to take anywhere from a dozen days to a few hundred years to complete -- an extremely fast time frame in terms of celestial events, Ivanova says.More than half of all stars in the universe are binary stars, but Ivanova says it was not known what a common envelope event would look like until now.
After analyzing the physics of what happens in the outer layers of a common envelope, the U of A researchers found that hot and ionized material in the common envelope cools and expands, then releases energy in the form of a bright red outburst of light.
Ivanova linked these theoretically anticipated common envelope outbursts with recently discovered luminous red novae, mysterious transients that are brighter than novae and just a bit less luminous than supernovae.
"Our research both provides a way to identify common envelope events and explains the luminosity generated during the common envelope event," said Ivanova.



