Enormous stellar shell raises theoretical questions.Enormous stellar shell raises theoretical questions Stars tend to lose material to the space that surrounds them. Some of this loss is gradual and continuous--the so-called stellar winds. Some is abrupt -- the sudden blowing off of a surface layer that then forms a shell around the star. A group of astronomers now reports in the Nov. 15 ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL The Astrophysical Journal, often abbreviated to ApJ, is a scientific journal covering astronomy and astrophysics. It was founded in 1895 by George Ellery Hale and James E. Keeler. It currently (October 2006) publishes three issues per month, with 500 pages per issue. the discovery of an especially large, cool shell around the star R Coronae Borealis R Coronae Borealis is a yellow supergiant star, and is the prototype of a class of variable stars, which fade by several magnitudes at irregular intervals. R Coronae Borealis itself normally shines at approximately magnitude 6, just about visible to the naked eye, in the . How this shell was formed and what makes it glow are both mysteries for which current theory does not seem to have answers. Many stars that throw off their outer layers form planetary nebulas, more or less spherical clouds of ionized i·on·ize tr. & intr.v. i·on·ized, i·on·iz·ing, i·on·iz·es To convert or be converted totally or partially into ions. i gas inside which the parent star resides. This shell, composed of carbon or silicate silicate, chemical compound containing silicon, oxygen, and one or more metals, e.g., aluminum, barium, beryllium, calcium, iron, magnesium, manganese, potassium, sodium, or zirconium. Silicates may be considered chemically as salts of the various silicic acids. grains, is about 100 times the size of an ordinary planetary nebula. The R Coronae Borealis shell is 8 parsecs or 26 light-years across, about 20 times as large as any shell previously found around a late-type star In stellar classification, a late-type star is a star of class K or class M. The term was coined in the early 20th century, when there was a belief that stars began their history as early-type stars of class O, B, or A, and subsequently cooled to late-type stars. such as this. One of the discoverers, Frederick C. Gillett of the National Optical Astronomy Optical astronomy has two meanings:
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) is a NASA research center located in the cities of Pasadena and La Cañada Flintridge, near Los Angeles, California, USA. in Pasadena, Calif., and Gerry Neugebauer of Caltech in Pasadena. The astronomers believe that the shell is the result of some process of mass expulsion that took about 125,000 years and ended around 25,000 years ago, but they are not sure quite what that process was. Currently stars like R Coronae Borealis appear to be losing mass gradually. This is something of a contradiction to present theory, which expects that such stars should lose their hydrogen-rich outer layers abruptly as their central nuclear fusion mechanism starts to burn heavier elements. However, according to the nature of the shell as revealed by observations of the Infrared Astronomy Satellite, this gradual process as seen today cannot completely explain what happened in the distant past to R Coronae Borealis. "Therefore, the process that built the extended shell had to be different from the one going on today," Gillett says. These stellar shells usually glow. They absorb radiation emitted by the stars in their centers or from the ambient "radiation field," the total contribution of other nearby stars. The radiation heats them until they glow, usually in the infrared. However, in this case, heating from the central star would be adequate only if the dust in the shell had a peculiar composition and unusually small grains. Ambient radiation doesn't seem to provide enough either, so the source of the heat remains a puzzle. Another puzzle is that, while such a shell should be mostly hydrogen, so far the observers have not seen any. In this range of the spectrum, evidence of hydrogen is hard to pin down, but they are looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. it. |
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