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Telescope takes close-ups of distant star.


New images from an array of radio telescopes This is a list of radio telescopes that are or have been used for radio astronomy. It includes both single dishes and interferometer arrays. They are listed by region, then by name; unnamed telescopes are in reverse size order at the end of the lists.  are providing the first detailed view of activity near a star other than our sun.

Although the elderly star, TX Camelo-pardalis, lies 1,000 light-years away, researchers were able to examine radio-emitting gas flung just a few hundred million kilometers--equivalent to about twice Earth's distance from the sun. Astronomers obtained the images by using the Very Large Baseline Array, a network of 10 radio telescopes stretching from the U.S. Virgin Islands to Hawaii.

Silicon monoxide gas spewing from the star generates intense radio emissions that the telescope array recorded. Visible-light telescopes can't detect these gaseous gas·e·ous
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or existing as a gas.

2. Full of or containing gas; gassy.
 expulsions because material surrounding the star absorbs and scatters visible light.

At least 3 billion years old, TX Camelo-pardalis is classified as a Mira variable Mira variables, named after the star Mira (IPA: /ˈmairə/), are a class of pulsating variable stars characterized by very red colors, pulsation periods longer than 100 days, and light amplitudes greater than one , an old, pulsating star that periodically brightens and dims. When it contracts, the star draws in nearby gas, and when it expands, it blows out an even larger amount. At this age, the star expels about an Earth's mass of gas each year.

The pictures, recorded over 80 weeks, reveal for the first time how the gas flows out from a star during this late stage, which lasts only about 10,000 years, notes Athol J. Kemball of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), federal observatory for radio astronomy, founded in 1956 and operated under contract with the National Science Foundation by Associated Universities, Inc., a group of major universities.  in Socorro, N.M. Exactly how such stars lose mass remains a mystery, but "this monitoring campaign has allowed a movie of the gas motions to be produced, which provides new insights into how this might occur," he notes. Instead of ejecting the gas equally in all directions, the star expels the material asymmetrically, just as the sun does during localized storms.

Kemball's collaborator, Philip Diamond of the University of Manchester The University of Manchester is a university located in Manchester, England. With over 40,000 students studying 500 academic programmes, more than 10,000 staff and an annual income of nearly £600 million it is the largest single-site University in the United Kingdom and receives  in England, unveiled the images Aug. 15 at a meeting of the International Astronomical Union “IAU” redirects here. For other uses, see IAU (disambiguation).

The International Astronomical Union (IAU) unites national astronomical societies from around the world.
 in Manchester.
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Title Annotation:TX Camelo-pardalis observations made with radio telescope
Author:Cowen, R.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Aug 19, 2000
Words:300
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