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Stellar death may spawn solar system.


Material shed by a dying star might give birth to planets. The red dwarf star Noun 1. red dwarf star - a small, old, relatively cool star; approximately 100 times the mass of Jupiter
red dwarf

flare star - a red dwarf star in which luminosity can change several magnitudes in a few minutes
 Mira A, located 350 light-years from Earth, is famous for its wildly varying brightness, which changes by a factor of 1,000 during every 11-month cycle. The elderly star blows off about an Earth-mass of its dusty outer layers every 7 years. About 1 percent of that material is snatched by the star's close companion, Mira B Mira B, also known as VZ Ceti, is the companion star to the variable star Mira. Suspected as early as 1918, it was visually confirmed in 1923 by Robert Grant Aitken, and has been observed more or less continually since then, most recently by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. .

New near-infrared images indicate that the material--silicate dust similar in composition to Earth's mantle--has formed a disk around Mira B. Observations with two large telescopes, the Keck 1 on Hawaii's Mauna Kea Mauna Kea (mou`nə kā`ə), dormant volcano, 13,796 ft (4,205 m) high, in the south central part of the island of Hawaii. It is the loftiest peak in the Hawaiian Islands and the highest island mountain in the world, rising c.  and the Gemini South atop Cerro Pachon in Chile, reveal that the disk resides at about the same distance from Mira B as Saturn does from the sun, reports Michael Ireland of the California Institute of Technology California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena, Calif.; originally for men, became coeducational in 1970; founded 1891 as Throop Polytechnic Institute; called Throop College of Technology, 1913–20.  in Pasadena.

Although the disk is now about as massive as Jupiter, it's likely to become three to five times as heavy during the next million years, as Mira A sheds more of its mass and becomes a dead cinder cin·der  
n.
1.
a. A burned or partly burned substance, such as coal, that is not reduced to ashes but is incapable of further combustion.

b. A partly charred substance that can burn further but without flame.
 called a white dwarf. Gas and dust coalescing coalescing (kōles´ing),
n a joining or fusing of parts.
 in a disk that heavy have the potential to make planets, Ireland says.

The discovery, says Ireland, suggests that while some stars may be born with planet-making disks, others may acquire them from partners. He adds that the finding also opens new venues to searches for young planets: double-star systems that contain white dwarfs. Such systems are expected to be relatively common where stellar death exceeds star birth, he notes, such as in our region of the galaxy.
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Title Annotation:PLANETARY DISKS
Publication:Science News
Date:Jan 27, 2007
Words:267
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