The terrible
twos: What might happen if our Sun had a twin
How would our Sun behave differently if it had a closely orbiting twin?
While astronomers don't know the exact answer, NASA's Chandra X-ray
Observatory has observed an intriguing star system that is beginning
to provide important clues.
Scientists from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO) used
Chandra to study two stars in an incredibly tight binary system. These
stars, part of the system known as 44i Bootis, orbit around so quickly
that that they pass in front of one another every three hours.
"The Universe has gift-wrapped a wonderful laboratory for us to study
stars like our Sun," said Nancy Brickhouse of SAO who led the research
team. "We can use this strange alignment of these two stars whipping
around each other to learn more about magnetic fields and outer atmospheres
in stars like our Sun."
For decades, scientists have known that the Sun at the center of our
Solar System creates complex magnetic fields as it spins on axis roughly
once every month. These magnetic fields confine giant arches of hot,
ionized gas that erupt from the solar surface. Occasionally, these eruptions
flare out in the direction of Earth and affects satellites and power
grids.
Astronomers have long predicted that rapidly spinning solar-like stars
could produce magnetic field patterns very different from those of our
Sun. Unfortunately, any star outside of our Solar System - including
44i Bootis - is too far away for even the biggest telescopes to resolve
magnetic loops on the surfaces.
However, the SAO team took advantage of the fact that 44i Bootis is
an eclipsing binary, where two stars circle around each other. The two
stars are aligned so that Chandra can capture the ebb and flow of radiation
as the stars pass in front of one another. Using the Doppler effect
- the same process that causes a siren to change its frequency as an
ambulance approaches - scientists were able to measure tiny wavelength
shift in the X-rays emanating from hot gas filling the magnetic field
structures.
"By measuring the changes in the Doppler shift, we can use Chandra
to pinpoint where the radiation is coming from on these stars and it
turns out it's not where many scientists would have expected it," said
SAO's Andrea Dupree. "Chandra shows that most of the radiation from
the 44i Booti stars comes from areas around their poles. It's puzzling
to understand how these stars, which are very much like our Sun in many
ways, can produce such different patterns of X-ray structures when in
a closely orbiting binary system.
"Chandra observed 44i Bootis, a multiple star system about 42 light
years from Earth in the constellation Bootes, with the High Energy Transmission
Grating for 59,000 seconds on April 25, 2000. In addition to Brickhouse
and Dupree, Peter Young of SAO was also a member of the research team
whose paper appeared in the Nov. 20, 2001, issue of the Astrophysical
Journal Letters.
The High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer was built by the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, Mass. NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the Chandra
program. TRW, Inc., Redondo Beach, Calif., is the prime contractor for
the spacecraft. The Smithsonian's Chandra X-ray Center controls science
and flight operations from Cambridge.
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