Science and Exploration

Hubble Maps 3-D Structure of Ejecta Around Erupting Star

By Keith Cowing
June 4, 2013
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Hubble Maps 3-D Structure of Ejecta Around Erupting Star
T Pyx, a recurrent nova
STScI

A flash of light from a stellar outburst has been used to probe for the first time the 3-D structure of material ejected by an erupting nova.
Astronomers used NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope to observe the light emitted by the close double-star system T Pyxidis, or T Pyx, a recurrent nova, during its latest outburst in April 2011. Contrary to some predictions, the astronomers were somewhat surprised to find that the ejecta from earlier outbursts stayed in the vicinity of the star and formed a disk of debris. The discovery suggests that material continues expanding outward along the system’s orbital plane, but it does not escape the system.

“We fully expected this to be a spherical shell,” says Arlin Crotts of Columbia University in New York City, a member of the research team. “This observation shows that it is a disk, and it is populated with fast-moving ejecta from previous outbursts.”

Team member Stephen Lawrence of Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y., will present the results today at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Indianapolis, Ind.

A nova erupts when a white dwarf, the burned-out core of a Sun-like star, has siphoned enough hydrogen off a companion star to trigger a thermonuclear runaway. As hydrogen builds up on the surface of the white dwarf, it becomes hotter and denser until it detonates like a colossal hydrogen bomb, leading to a 10,000-fold increase in brightness in a little more than one day. Nova explosions are extremely powerful, equal to a blast of one million billion tons of dynamite. T Pyx erupts every 12 to 50 years.

Team member Jennifer Sokoloski, also of Columbia University and co-investigator on the project, suggests that these data indicate that the companion star plays an important role in shaping how material is ejected, presumably along the system’s orbital plane, creating the pancake-shaped disk. The disk is tilted about 30 degrees from face-on toward Earth.

Using Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3, the team took advantage of the blast of light emitted by the erupting nova to trace the light’s path as it lit up the disk and material from previous ejecta. The disk is so vast, about a light-year across, that the nova’s light cannot illuminate all of the material at once. Instead, the light sweeps across the material, sequentially illuminating parts of the disk, a phenomenon called a light echo. The light reveals which parts of the disk are nearer to Earth and which sections are farther away. By tracing the light, the team assembled a 3-D map of the structure around the nova.

“We’ve all seen how light from the fireworks shells during the grand finale will light up the smoke and soot from shells earlier in the show,” notes team member Lawrence. “In an analogous way, we’re using light from T Pyx’s latest outburst and its propagation at the speed of light to dissect its fireworks displays from decades past.”

Although astronomers have witnessed light propagating through material surrounding other novae, this is the first time that the immediate environment around an erupting star has been studied in three dimensions. Astronomers have studied light echoes from other novae, but those phenomena illuminated interstellar material around the stars.

The team also used the light echo to refine estimates of the nova’s distance from Earth. The new distance is 15,600 light-years from Earth. Previous estimates were between 6,500 light-years and 16,000 light-years. T Pyx is located in the southern constellation Pyxis, the Mariner’s Compass.

The team is continuing to analyze the Hubble data to develop a model of the outflow. T Pyx has a history of petulant outbursts. Besides the 2011 event, other previous known eruptions occurred in 1890, 1902, 1920, 1944, and 1966.

Astronomers call erupting stars novae — Latin for “new” — because they abruptly appear in the sky. A nova quickly begins to fade in several days or weeks as the hydrogen is exhausted and blown into space.

PIO Contact:
Donna Weaver
Space Telescope Science Institute
+1 410-338-4493
dweaver@stsci.edu

Science Contact:
Dr. Arlin Crotts
Columbia University
+1 917-841-8348
arlin@astro.columbia.edu

The team also includes Helena Uthas of Columbia University. The team’s results have been accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letters [http://arxiv.org/abs/1305.5245].

Text & Images:
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2013/21/

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