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5th Graders Know About our Binary Sun.Are you Smarter.2010
Video and 60 pictures!!!
Listen to this as YOU gaze at the pictures!!!
Dj Sykes - Secret Operations.2010.192kbps
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Two questions for YOU to Analyze:
1. Why did one of our children Come home and ask if this video was TRUE???
Are they actually teaching some truth in the schools NOW???
2. Are YOU smarter than a fifth Grader??? Prove it to yourself!!! Do some research!!!
YOU may be surprised at what you Find!!!
Have you ever wondered where the moon came from?
Have you ever contemplated how the asteroid belt Came to be?
These are basic things to WONDER about!! We need everyone’s help!! Do your part!!
When the student is ready, the teacher will present one’s self.
Come help us figure this mystery OUT!!!!
No matter what your color or belief, Sex or age, YOU can be a scientist!!
Challenge yourself, your peers, your teachers. Participate in a revolution in science!!
UNDERSTAND, IT IS YOUR WORLD!!! & TOGETHER we can Figure it OUT!!!
When WE all UNDERSTAND HOW MUCH WE ARE THE SAME,
TRUE POSITIVE things happen all around YOU!!!
Your Children, (ARE) Tomorrow's LEADERS!!!-------------->>>>>>>>>>>>
------------------------------------------------------------------------->
These are for Planet X, Precession & Pole/Magnetic Reversal research ONLY!
NOT!! Religious debate!! Your faith is your OWN BUSINESS!!
We are here for Research ONLY!!
If you have an open mind, you will GO far!!!
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---->>> includes:
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VIDEO & PICTURES .TIFF .CUB .JPG .GIF
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Can a planet have two suns 2008-004.m4v
info:
Answered by Dr. Carolyn Brinkworth of NASA's Spitzer Science Center Credit: NASA and Caltech
Ask an Astronomer
Question: "Can a planet have two suns?"
segment number: 2008-004
Carolyn Brinkworth:
For anyone to stand on the surface of a planet and see two setting
suns, three things must be true:
1) These close pairs of stars must exist
2) Planets must be able to form around these double stars
3) The planets must be able to stay in orbit around the stars long
enough for life to evolve.
The first of these questions is easy to answer -- these close pairs
of stars are everywhere! They are called binary stars, and over half
of all of the stars you can see in the night sky are really binaries,
they're just so far away from us that they look like a single point
of light.
Some orbit so far apart that from one star, the other just looks like
a bright point of light. Others orbit so close to each other that the
more massive one pulls the outer atmosphere off the other in a tiny
stream of material that swirls down onto the massive star like water
spiralling down a plughole.
So, can planets form around binary stars? Well, in fact some binary
stars may be better at forming planets than single stars.
Planets form in a process called "accretion" from the ring of dust
and gas that's left over from the formation of the stars in the
system. This ring of stellar junk slowly clumps together into bigger
and bigger chunks, until they eventually grow to become planets.
A second star in the system can have a double benefit -- it may
increase the clumping of the dust, so that even disks with a small
amount of material in them can produce planets, and it may also speed
the accretion process up, allowing planets to form more quickly than
around single stars.
There have been a number of Jupiter-sized planets found around binary
systems, and a Spitzer Space Telescope study has found planet-forming
disks around 40-60% of the binary systems they observed.
So far, it's looking good. The final step is keeping the planets
around the binary stars for long enough that life can evolve on the
surface. This is the trickiest part of the whole puzzle.
In fact, astronomers have found that the vast majority of planetary
orbits around binary stars are unstable -- at some point in the
planet's lifetime, the gravitational tugs of the two stars will cause
the planet to either crash into one of the stars or to fly out of the
system altogether.
The good news is that there are some planetary orbits that are
stable. The simplest is when the two stars are very close together,
and the planet orbits a long way away from them. Then, even though
the stars are moving, the planet wobbles slightly in its orbit, but
it remains stable. The second simple scenario is when the stars are a
very long way away from each other, and the planet only orbits one of
them. In this case, both stars may have a planet around them, and two
civilisations may evolve as virtual neighbours in the Universe.
Either way, science fiction's vision of two suns setting in the same
sky may be closer to science fact than we on Earth ever thought
possible.
For "Ask an Astronomer," I'm Dr. Carolyn Brinkworth of the Spitzer
Science Center.
more info:
I am currently a JPL postdoc in astronomy, working at the Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology. That's me in the photo up on the right. It would be weird if it wasn't. I work with Don Hoard and Stefanie Wachter, plus assorted kind people who help to pay me, mainly concentrating on cataclysmic variables and similar related objects.
Contact Details
Dr. Carolyn Brinkworth
Spitzer Science Center,
California Institute of Technology M/C 220-6,
1200. E. California Blvd,
Pasadena CA 91125,
USA
Tel: +1 626-395-1988
Email: csb<at>ipac.caltech.edu
Publications in refereed journals
1. Brinkworth, C. S.; Marsh, T. R.; Dhillon, V. S.; Knigge, C.; 2005, MNRAS, accepted. “Detection of a period decrease in NN Ser with ULTRACAM: evidence for strong magnetic braking or an unseen companion?â€
2. Brinkworth, C. S.; Marsh, T. R.; Morales-Rueda, L.; Maxted, P. F. L.; Burleigh, M. R.; Good, S. A.; 2005, MNRAS, 357, 333. “Rotational period of WD1953-011—a magnetic white dwarf with a star spotâ€
3. Maxted, P. F. L.; Marsh, T. R.; Morales-Rueda, L.; Barstow, M. A.; Dobbie, P. D.; Screiber, M. R.; Dhillon, V. S.; Brinkworth, C. S.; 2004, MNRAS, 355, 1143. “RXJ2130.6+4710—an eclipsing white dwarf—M Dwarf binary starâ€
4. Feline, W. J.; Dhillon, V. S.; Marsh, T. R.; Brinkworth, C. S.; 2004, MNRAS, 355, 1. “ULTRACAM photometry of the eclipsing cataclysmic variables XZ Eri and DV UMaâ€
5. Klose, S.; Greiner, J.; Rau, A.; Henden, A. A.; Hartmann, D. H.; Zeh, A.; Ries, C.; Masetti, N.; Malesani, D.; Guenther, E.; and 31 co-authors, 2004, AJ, 128, 1942. “Probing a gamma-ray burst progenitor at a redshift of z=2: a comprehensive observing campaign of the afterglow of GRB030226â€
6. Sing, D. K.; Holberg, J. B.; Burleigh, M. R.; Good, S. A.; Barstow, M. A.; Oswalt, T. D.; Howell, S. B.; Brinkworth, C. S.; Rudkin, M.; Johnston, K.; Raffery, S., 2004, AJ, 127, 2936. “Spectroscopic and photometric analysis of HS1136+6644: a hot young DAO+K7V post-common envelope, pre-cataclysmic variable binaryâ€
7. Brinkworth, C. S.; Burleigh, M. R.; Wynn, G. A.; Marsh, T. R.; 2004, MNRAS, 348L, 33. “Photometric variability of the unique magnetic white dwarf GD365â€
8. Feline, W. J.; Dhillon, V. S.; Marsh, T. R.; Stevenson, M. J.; Watson, C. A.; Brinkworth, C. S.; 2004, MNRAS, 347, 1173. “ULTRACAM photometry of the eclipsing cataclysmic variable OU Virâ€
Ph.D Thesis
9. Brinkworth. C. S.; 2005, Ph.D Thesis. “High time-resolution observations of cataclysmic variable stars and related objectsâ€
Conference Proceedings
10. Hoard, D. W.; Brinkworth, C. S.; Wachter, S.; 2005, ASPC, 330, 473. “Infrared properties of cataclysmic variables in the 2MASS all sky data releaseâ€
11. Brinkworth, C. S.; Marsh, T. R.; Dhillon, V. S.; Feline, W. J.; 2005, ASPC, 330, 329. “ULTRACAM observations of the braking rate of the pre-CV NN Serâ€
12. Hoard, D. W.; Brinkworth, C. S.; Wachter, S.; 2003, AAS, 203, 4408. “Infrared properties of cataclysmic variables from the 2MASS all sky data releaseâ€
13. Sing, D.K.; Holberg, J.B.; Barstow, M. A.; Burleigh, M.R.; Good, S.; Oswalt, T.; Howell, S.; Brinkworth, C. S.; 2003, whdw conf, 349. “HS1136+6646: A hot DAO.5+K6V young post-CE pre-CV binaryâ€
14. Brinkworth, C. S.; Marsh, T.R.; Maxted, P. F. L.; Ferrario, L. ; Morales-Rueda, L.; Wickramasinghe, D. T.; 2003, whdw conf, 201. “WD1953-011—a white dwarf with a star spot?â€
15. Wade, G. A.; Bagnulo, S.; Szeifert, T.; Brinkworth, C. S.; Marsh, T.; Landstreet, J.; Maxted, P.; 2003, ASPC, 307, 569. “The magnetic white dwarf WD1953-011: migrating magnetic and brightness spots?â€
A binary star is a star system consisting of two stars orbiting around their common center of mass. The brighter star is called the primary and the other is its companion star, comes,[1] or secondary. Research between the early 1800s and today suggests that many stars are part of either binary star systems or star systems with more than two stars, called multiple star systems. The term double star may be used synonymously with binary star, but more generally, a double star may be either a binary star or an optical double star which consists of two stars with no physical connection but which appear close together in the sky as seen from the Earth. A double star may be determined to be optical if its components have sufficiently different proper motions or radial velocities, or if parallax measurements reveal its two components to be at sufficiently different distances from the Earth. Most known double stars have not yet been determined to be either bound binary star systems or optical doubles.
Binary star systems are very important in astrophysics because calculations of their orbits allow the masses of their component stars to be directly determined, which in turn allows other stellar parameters, such as radius and density, to be indirectly estimated. This also determines an empirical mass-luminosity relationship (MLR) from which the masses of single stars can be estimated.
Binary stars are often detected optically, in which case they are called visual binaries. Many visual binaries have long orbital periods of several centuries or millennia and therefore have orbits which are uncertain or poorly known. They may also be detected by indirect techniques, such as spectroscopy (spectroscopic binaries) or astrometry (astrometric binaries). If a binary star happens to orbit in a plane along our line of sight, its components will mutually eclipse and transit each other; these pairs are called eclipsing binaries, or, as they are detected by their changes in brightness during eclipses and transits, photometric binaries.
If components in binary star systems are close enough they can gravitationally distort their mutual outer stellar atmospheres. In some cases, these close binary systems can exchange mass, which may bring their evolution to stages that single stars cannot attain. Examples of binaries are Algol (an eclipsing binary), Sirius, and Cygnus X-1 (of which one member is probably a black hole). Binary stars are also common as the nuclei of many planetary nebulae, and are the progenitors of both novae and type Ia supernovae.
Discovery
The term binary was first used in this context by Sir William Herschel in 1802,[2] when he wrote:[3]
"If, on the contrary, two stars should really be situated very near each other, and at the same time so far insulated as not to be materially affected by the attractions of neighbouring stars, they will then compose a separate system, and remain united by the bond of their own mutual gravitation towards each other. This should be called a real double star; and any two stars that are thus mutually connected, form the binary sidereal system which we are now to consider."
By the modern definition, the term binary star is generally restricted to pairs of stars which revolve around a common centre of mass. Binary stars which can be resolved with a telescope or interferometric methods are known as visual binaries.[4][5][6] For most of the known visual binary stars one whole revolution has not been observed yet, they are observed to have travelled along a curved path or a partial arc.[7]
Gwiazda podwójna zacmieniowa schemat.png.svg
The more general term double star is used for pairs of stars which are seen to be close together in the sky.[2] This distinction is rarely made in languages other than English.[4] Double stars may be binary systems or may be merely two stars that appear to be close together in the sky but have vastly different true distances from the Sun. The latter are termed optical doubles or optical pairs.[8]
Since the invention of the telescope, many pairs of double stars have been found. Early examples include Mizar and Acrux. Mizar, in the Big Dipper (Ursa Major), was observed to be double by Giovanni Battista Riccioli in 1650[9][10] (and probably earlier by Benedetto Castelli and Galileo).[11] The bright southern star Acrux, in the Southern Cross, was discovered to be double by Father Fontenay in 1685.[9]
John Michell was the first to suggest that double stars might be physically attached to each other when he argued in 1767 that the probability that a double star was due to a chance alignment was small.[12][13] William Herschel began observing double stars in 1779 and soon thereafter published catalogs of about 700 double stars.[14] By 1803, he had observed changes in the relative positions in a number of double stars over the course of 25 years, and concluded that they must be binary systems;[15] the first orbit of a binary star, however, was not computed until 1827, when Félix Savary computed the orbit of Xi Ursae Majoris.[16] Since this time, many more double stars have been catalogued and measured. The Washington Double Star Catalog, a database of visual double stars compiled by the United States Naval Observatory, contains over 100,000 pairs of double stars,[17] including optical doubles as well as binary stars. Orbits are known for only a few thousand of these double stars,[18] and most have not been ascertained to be either true binaries or optical double stars.[19] This can be determined by observing the relative motion of the pairs. If the motion is part of an orbit, or if the stars have similar radial velocities and the difference in their proper motions is small compared to their common proper motion, the pair is probably physical.[20] One of the tasks that remains for visual observers of double stars is to obtain sufficient observations to prove or disprove gravitational connection.
[edit] Classifications
[edit] By methods of observation
Binary stars are classified into four types according to the way in which they are observed: visually, by observation; spectroscopically, by periodic changes in spectral lines; photometrically, by changes in brightness caused by an eclipse; or astrometrically, by measuring a deviation in a star's position caused by an unseen companion.[4][21] Any binary star can belong to several of these classes; for example, several spectroscopic binaries are also eclipsing binaries.
Visual binaries
A visual binary star is a binary star for which the angular separation between the two components is great enough to permit them to be observed as a double star in a telescope, or even high-powered binoculars. The resolving power of the telescope is an important factor in the detection of visual binaries, and as telescopes become larger and more powerful an increasing number of visual binaries will be detected. The brightness of the two stars is also an important factor, as brighter stars are harder to separate, due to their glare, than dimmer ones are.
The brighter star of a visual binary is the primary star, and the dimmer is considered the secondary. In some publications (especially older ones), a faint secondary is called the comes (plural comites; English: companion.) If the stars are the same brightness, the discoverer designation for the primary is customarily accepted.[22]
The position angle of the secondary with respect to the primary is measured, together with the angular distance between the two stars. The time of observation is also recorded. After a sufficient number of observations are recorded over a period of time, they are plotted in polar coordinates with the primary star at the origin, and the most probable ellipse is drawn through these points such that the Keplerian law of areas is satisfied. This ellipse is known as the apparent ellipse, and is the projection of the actual elliptical orbit of the secondary with respect to the primary on the plane of the sky. From this projected ellipse the complete elements of the orbit may be computed, where the semi-major axis can only be expressed in angular units unless the stellar parallax, and hence the distance, of the system is known.[5]
Spectroscopic binaries
Sometimes, the only evidence of a binary star comes from the Doppler effect on its emitted light. In these cases, the binary consists of a pair of stars where the spectral lines in the light emitted from each star shifts first toward the blue, then toward the red, as each moves first toward us, and then away from us, during its motion about their common center of mass, with the period of their common orbit.
In these systems, the separation between the stars is usually very small, and the orbital velocity very high. Unless the plane of the orbit happens to be perpendicular to the line of sight, the orbital velocities will have components in the line of sight and the observed radial velocity of the system will vary periodically. Since radial velocity can be measured with a spectrometer by observing the Doppler shift of the stars' spectral lines, the binaries detected in this manner are known as spectroscopic binaries. Most of these cannot be resolved as a visual binary, even with telescopes of the highest existing resolving power.
In some spectroscopic binaries, spectral lines from both stars are visible and the lines are alternately double and single. Such a system is known as a double-lined spectroscopic binary (often denoted "SB2"). In other systems, the spectrum of only one of the stars is seen and the lines in the spectrum shift periodically towards the blue, then towards red and back again. Such stars are known as single-lined spectroscopic binaries ("SB1").
The orbit of a spectroscopic binary is determined by making a long series of observations of the radial velocity of one or both components of the system. The observations are plotted against time, and from the resulting curve a period is determined. If the orbit is circular then the curve will be a sine curve. If the orbit is elliptical, the shape of the curve will depend on the eccentricity of the ellipse and the orientation of the major axis with reference to the line of sight.
It is impossible to determine individually the semi-major axis a and the inclination of the orbit plane i. However, the product of the semi-major axis and the sine of the inclination (i.e. a sin i) may be determined directly in linear units (e.g. kilometres). If either a or i can be determined by other means, as in the case of eclipsing binaries, a complete solution for the orbit can be found.[23]
Binary stars that are both visual and spectroscopic binaries are rare, and are a precious source of valuable information when found. Visual binary stars often have large true separations, with periods measured in decades to centuries; consequently, they usually have orbital speeds too small to be measured spectroscopically. Conversely, spectroscopic binary stars move fast in their orbits because they are close together, usually too close to be detected as visual binaries. Binaries that are both visual and spectroscopic thus must be relatively close to Earth.
Eclipsing binaries
An eclipsing binary, with an indication of the variation in intensity.[24][25]
An eclipsing binary star is a binary star in which the orbit plane of the two stars lies so nearly in the line of sight of the observer that the components undergo mutual eclipses. In the case where the binary is also a spectroscopic binary and the parallax of the system is known, the binary is quite valuable for stellar analysis.[26] Algol is the best-known example of an eclipsing binary.[27]
In the last decade, measurement of eclipsing binaries' fundamental parameters has become possible with 8 meter class telescopes. This makes it feasible to use them as standard candles. Recently, they have been used to give direct distance estimates to the LMC, SMC, Andromeda Galaxy and Triangulum Galaxy. Eclipsing binaries offer a direct method to gauge the distance to galaxies to a new improved 5% level of accuracy.[28]
Eclipsing binaries are variable stars, not because the light of the individual components vary but because of the eclipses. The light curve of an eclipsing binary is characterized by periods of practically constant light, with periodic drops in intensity. If one of the stars is larger than the other, one will be obscured by a total eclipse while the other will be obscured by an annular eclipse.
The period of the orbit of an eclipsing binary may be determined from a study of the light curve, and the relative sizes of the individual stars can be determined in terms of the radius of the orbit by observing how quickly the brightness changes as the disc of the near star slides over the disc of the distant star. If it is also a spectroscopic binary the orbital elements can also be determined, and the mass of the stars can be determined relatively easily, which means that the relative densities of the stars can be determined in this case.[29]
Astrometric binaries
Astronomers have discovered some stars that seemingly orbit around an empty space. Astrometric binaries are relatively nearby stars which can be seen to wobble around a point in space, with no visible companion. The same mathematics used for ordinary binaries can be applied to infer the mass of the missing companion. The companion could be very dim, so that it is currently undetectable or masked by the glare of its primary, or it could be an object that emits little or no electromagnetic radiation, for example a neutron star.[30]
The visible star's position is carefully measured and detected to vary, due to the gravitational influence from its counterpart. The position of the star is repeatedly measured relative to more distant stars, and then checked for periodic shifts in position. Typically this type of measurement can only be performed on nearby stars, such as those within 10 parsecs. Nearby stars often have a relatively high proper motion, so astrometric binaries will appear to follow a sinusoidal path across the sky.
If the companion is sufficiently massive to cause an observable shift in position of the star, then its presence can be deduced. From precise astrometric measurements of the movement of the visible star over a sufficiently long period of time, information about the mass of the companion and its orbital period can be determined.[31] Even though the companion is not visible, the characteristics of the system can be determined from the observations using Kepler's laws.[32]
This method of detecting binaries is also used to locate extrasolar planets orbiting a star. However, the requirements to perform this measurement are very exacting, due to the great difference in the mass ratio, and the typically long period of the planet's orbit. Detection of position shifts of a star is a very exacting science, and it is difficult to achieve the necessary precision. Space telescopes can avoid the bluring effect of the Earth's atmosphere, resulting in more precise resolution.
[edit] By configuration of the system
Artist's conception of a cataclysmic variable system.
Another classification is based on the distance of the stars, relative to their sizes:[33]
Detached binaries are binary stars where each component is within its Roche lobe, i.e. the area where the gravitational pull of the star itself is larger than that of the other component. The stars have no major effect on each other, and essentially evolve separately. Most binaries belong to this class.
Semidetached binary stars are binary stars where one of the components fills the binary star's Roche lobe and the other does not. Gas from the surface of the Roche lobe filling component (donor) is transferred to the other, accreting star. The mass transfer dominates the evolution of the system. In many cases, the inflowing gas forms an accretion disc around the accretor.
A contact binary is a type of binary star in which both components of the binary fill their Roche lobes. The uppermost part of the stellar atmospheres forms a common envelope that surrounds both stars. As the friction of the envelope brakes the orbital motion, the stars may eventually merge.[34]
Cataclysmic variables and X-ray binaries
When a binary system contains a compact object such as a white dwarf, neutron star or black hole, gas from the other, donor, star can accrete onto the compact object. This releases gravitational potential energy, causing the gas to become hotter and emit radiation. Cataclysmic variables, where the compact object is a white dwarf, are examples of such systems.[35] In X-ray binaries, the compact object can be either a neutron star or a black hole. These binaries are classified as low-mass or high-mass according to the mass of the donor star. High-mass X-ray binaries contain a young, early type, high-mass donor star which transfers mass by its stellar wind, while low-mass X-ray binaries are semidetached binaries in which gas from a late-type donor star overflows the Roche lobe and falls towards the neutron star or black hole.[36] Probably the best known example of an X-ray binary at present is the high-mass X-ray binary Cygnus X-1. In Cygnus X-1, the mass of the unseen companion is believed to be about nine times that of our sun,[37] far exceeding the Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff limit for the maximum theoretical mass of a neutron star. It is therefore believed to be a black hole; it was the first object for which this was widely believed.[38]
Orbital period
The orbital period can e.g. be a few days (components of Beta Lyrae), but also hundreds of thousands of years (Proxima Centauri around Alpha Centauri AB),
Designations
The components of binary stars are denoted by the suffixes A and B appended to the system's designation, A denoting the primary and B the secondary. The suffix AB may be used to denote the pair (for example, the binary star a Centauri AB consists of the stars a Centauri A and a Centauri B.) Additional letters, such as C, D, etc., may be used for systems with more than two stars.[39] In cases where the binary star has a Bayer designation and is widely separated, it is possible that the members of the pair will be designated with superscripts; an example is ? Reticuli, whose components are ?1 Reticuli and ?2 Reticuli.[40]
Double stars are also designated by an abbreviation giving the discoverer together with an index number.[41] a Centauri, for example, was found to be double by Father Richaud in 1689, and so is designated RHD 1.[9][42] These discoverer codes can be found in the Washington Double Star Catalog.[43]
Binary star evolution
Formation
While it is not impossible that some binaries might be created through gravitational capture between two single stars, given the very low likelihood of such an event (three objects are actually required, as conservation of energy rules out a single gravitating body capturing another) and the high number of binaries, this cannot be the primary formation process. Also, the observation of binaries consisting of pre main sequence stars, supports the theory that binaries are already formed during star formation. Fragmentation of the molecular cloud during the formation of protostars is an acceptable explanation for the formation of a binary or multiple star system.[44][45]
The outcome of the three body problem, where the three stars are of comparable mass, is that eventually one of the three stars will be ejected from the system and, assuming no significant further perturbations, the remaining two will form a stable binary system.
Mass transfer and accretion
As a main sequence star increases in size during its evolution, it may at some point exceed its Roche lobe, meaning that some of its matter ventures into a region where the gravitational pull of its companion star is larger than its own.[46] The result is that matter will transfer from one star to another through a process known as Roche Lobe overflow (RLOF), either being absorbed by direct impact or through an accretion disc. The mathematical point through which this transfer happens is called the first Lagrangian point[47] It is not uncommon that the accretion disc is the brightest (and thus sometimes the only visible) element of a binary star.
An animation of an eclipsing binary system undergoing mass transfer.
If a star grows outside of its Roche lobe too fast for all abundant matter to be transferred to the other component, it is also possible that matter will leave the system through other Lagrange points or as stellar wind, thus being effectively lost to both components.[48] Since the evolution of a star is determined by its mass, the process influences the evolution of both companions, and creates stages that can not be attained by single stars.[49][50]
Studies of the eclipsing ternary Algol led to the Algol paradox in the theory of stellar evolution: although components of a binary star form at the same time, and massive stars evolve much faster than the less massive ones, it was observed that the more massive component Algol A is still in the main sequence, while the less massive Algol B is a subgiant star at a later evolutionary stage. The paradox can be solved by mass transfer: when the more massive star became a subgiant, it filled its Roche lobe, and most of the mass was transferred to the other star, which is still in the main sequence. In some binaries similar to Algol, a gas flow can actually be seen.[51]
[edit] Runaways and novae
A composite image of the remnants of the SN 1572 supernova.
It is also possible for widely separated binaries to lose gravitational contact with each other during their lifetime, as a result of external perturbations. The components will then move on to evolve as single stars. A close encounter between two binary systems can also result in the gravitational disruption of both systems, with some of the stars being ejected at high velocities, leading to runaway stars.[52][53]
If a white dwarf has a close companion star that overflows its Roche lobe, the white dwarf will steadily accrete gases from the star's outer atmosphere. These are compacted on the white dwarf's surface by its intense gravity, compressed and heated to very high temperatures as additional material is drawn in. The white dwarf consists of degenerate matter, and so is largely unresponsive to heat, while the accreted hydrogen is not. Hydrogen fusion can occur in a stable manner on the surface through the CNO cycle, causing the enormous amount of energy liberated by this process to blow the remaining gases away from the white dwarf's surface. The result is an extremely bright outburst of light, known as a nova.[54]
In extreme cases this event can cause the white dwarf to exceed the Chandrasekhar limit and trigger a supernova that destroys the entire star, and is another possible cause for runaways.[55][56] A famous example of such an event is the supernova SN 1572, which was observed by Tycho Brahe. The Hubble Space Telescope recently took a picture of the remnants of this event.
[edit] Use in astrophysics
A simulated example of a binary star, where two bodies with similar mass orbit around a common barycenter in elliptic orbits.
Binaries provide the best method for astronomers to determine the mass of a distant star. The gravitational pull between them causes them to orbit around their common center of mass. From the orbital pattern of a visual binary, or the time variation of the spectrum of a spectroscopic binary, the mass of its stars can be determined. In this way, the relation between a star's appearance (temperature and radius) and its mass can be found, which allows for the determination of the mass of non-binaries.
Because a large proportion of stars exist in binary systems, binaries are particularly important to our understanding of the processes by which stars form. In particular, the period and masses of the binary tell us about the amount of angular momentum in the system. Because this is a conserved quantity in physics, binaries give us important clues about the conditions under which the stars were formed.
[edit] Research findings
It is estimated that approximately 1/3 of the star systems in the Milky Way are binary or multiple, with the remaining 2/3 consisting of single stars.[57]
There is a direct correlation between the period of revolution of a binary star and the eccentricity of its orbit, with systems of short period having smaller eccentricity. Binary stars may be found with any conceivable separation, from pairs orbiting so closely that they are practically in contact with each other, to pairs so distantly separated that their connection is indicated only by their common proper motion through space. Among gravitationally bound binary star systems, there exists a so called log normal distribution of periods, with the majority of these systems orbiting with a period of about 100 years. This is supporting evidence for the theory that binary systems are formed during star formation.[58]
In pairs where the two stars are of equal brightness, they are also of the same spectral type. In systems where the brightnesses are different, the fainter star is bluer if the brighter star is a giant star, and redder if the brighter star belongs to the main sequence.[59]
Artist's impression of the sight from a (hypothetical) moon of planet HD 188753 Ab (upper left), which orbits a triple star system. The brightest companion is just below the horizon.
The mass of a star can be directly determined only from its gravitational attraction. Apart from the Sun and stars which act as gravitational lenses, this can be done only in binary and multiple star systems, making the binary stars an important class of stars. In the case of a visual binary star, after the orbit and the stellar parallax of the system has been determined, the combined mass of the two stars may be obtained by a direct application of the Keplerian harmonic law.[60]
Unfortunately, it is impossible to obtain the complete orbit of a spectroscopic binary unless it is also a visual or an eclipsing binary, so from these objects only a determination of the joint product of mass and the sine of the angle of inclination relative to the line of sight is possible. In the case of eclipsing binaries which are also spectroscopic binaries, it is possible to find a complete solution for the specifications (mass, density, size, luminosity, and approximate shape) of both members of the system.
[edit] Planets around binary stars
Science fiction has often featured planets of binary or ternary stars as a setting. In reality, some orbital ranges are impossible for dynamical reasons (the planet would be expelled from its orbit relatively quickly, being either ejected from the system altogether or transferred to a more inner or outer orbital range), whilst other orbits present serious challenges for eventual biospheres because of likely extreme variations in surface temperature during different parts of the orbit. Planets that orbit just one star in a binary pair are said to have "S-type" orbits, whereas those that orbit around both stars have "P-type" or "circumbinary" orbits. It is estimated that 50–60% of binary stars are capable of supporting habitable terrestrial planets within stable orbital ranges.[61]
Simulations have shown that the presence of a binary companion can actually improve the rate of planet formation within stable orbital zones by "stirring up" the protoplanetary disk, increasing the accretion rate of the protoplanets within.[61]
Detecting planets in multiple star systems introduces additional technical difficulties, which may be why they are only rarely found.[62] Examples include PSR B1620-26 b and Gamma Cephei.
A study of fourteen previously known planetary systems found three of these systems to be binary systems. All planets were found to be in S-type orbits around the primary star. In these three cases the secondary star was much dimmer than the primary and so was not previously detected. This discovery resulted in a recalculation of parameters for both the planet and the primary star.[63]
[edit] Binary star examples
The two visibly distinguishable components of Albireo.
The large distance between the components, as well as their difference in color, make Albireo one of the easiest observable visual binaries. The brightest member, which is the third brightest star in the constellation Cygnus, is actually a close binary itself. Also in the Cygnus constellation is Cygnus X-1, an X-ray source considered to be a black hole. It is a high-mass X-ray binary, with the optical counterpart being a variable star.[64] Another famous binary is Sirius, the brightest star in the night time sky, with a visual apparent magnitude of -1.46. It is located in the constellation Canis Major. In 1844 Friedrich Bessel deduced that Sirius was a binary. In 1862 Alvan Graham Clark discovered the companion (Sirius B; the visible star is Sirius A). In 1915 astronomers at the Mount Wilson Observatory determined that Sirius B was a white dwarf, the first to be discovered. In 2005, using the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers determined Sirius B to be 12,000 km (7,456 mi) in diameter, with a mass that is 98% of the Sun.[65]
An example of an eclipsing binary is Epsilon Aurigae in the constellation Auriga. The visible component belongs to the spectral class F0, the other (eclipsing) component is not visible. The next such eclipse occurs from 2009–2011, and it is hoped that the extensive observations that will likely be carried out may yield further insights into the nature of this system. Another eclipsing binary is Beta Lyrae, which is a semi-detached binary star system in the constellation of Lyra.
Other interesting binaries include 61 Cygni (a binary in the constellation Cygnus, composed of two K class (orange) main sequence stars, 61 Cygni A and 61 Cygni B, which is known for its large proper motion), Procyon (the brightest star in the constellation Canis Minor and the eighth brightest star in the night time sky, which is a binary consisting of the main star with a faint white dwarf companion), SS Lacertae (an eclipsing binary which stopped eclipsing), V907 Sco (an eclipsing binary which stopped, restarted, then stopped again) and BG Geminorum (an eclipsing binary which is thought to contain a black hole with a K0 star in orbit around it).
Multiple star examples
Systems with more than two stars are termed multiple stars. Algol is the most famous ternary (long thought to be a binary), located in the constellation Perseus. Two components of the system eclipse each other, the variation in the intensity of Algol first being recorded in 1670 by Geminiano Montanari. The name Algol means "demon star" (from Arabic ????? al-ghul), which was probably given due to its peculiar behavior. Another visible ternary is Alpha Centauri, in the southern constellation of Centaurus, which contains the fourth brightest star in the night sky, with an apparent visual magnitude of -0.01. This system also underscores the fact that binaries need not be discounted in the search for habitable planets. Alpha Centauri A and B have an 11 AU distance at closest approach, and both should have stable habitable zones.[66]
There are also examples of systems beyond ternaries: Castor is a sextuple star system, which is the second brightest star in the constellation Gemini and one of the brightest stars in the nighttime sky. Astronomically, Castor was discovered to be a visual binary in 1719. Each of the components of Castor is itself a spectroscopic binary. Castor also has a faint and widely separated companion, which is also a spectroscopic binary.
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