NASA's Kepler space telescope has witnessed the effects of a dead star
bending the light of its companion star. The findings are among the first
detections of this phenomenon -- a result of Einstein's general theory of
relativity -- in binary, or double, star systems.
The dead star, called a white dwarf, is the burnt-out core of what used to be
a star like our sun. It is locked in an orbiting dance with its partner, a small
"red dwarf" star. While the tiny white dwarf is physically smaller than the red
dwarf, it is more massive.
"This white dwarf is about the size of Earth but has the mass of the sun,"
said Phil Muirhead of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, lead
author of the findings to be published April 20 in the Astrophysical Journal.
"It's so hefty that the red dwarf, though larger in physical size, is circling
around the white dwarf."
Kepler's primary job is to scan stars in search of orbiting planets. As the
planets pass by, they block the starlight by miniscule amounts, which Kepler's
sensitive detectors can see.
"The technique is equivalent to spotting a flea on a light bulb 3,000 miles
away, roughly the distance from Los Angeles to New York City," said Avi Shporer,
co-author of the study, also of Caltech.
Muirhead and his colleagues regularly use public Kepler data to search for
and confirm planets around smaller stars, the red dwarfs, also known as M
dwarfs. These stars are cooler and redder than our yellow sun. When the team
first looked at the Kepler data for a target called KOI-256, they thought they
were looking at a huge gas giant planet eclipsing the red dwarf.
"We saw what appeared to be huge dips in the light from the star, and
suspected it was from a giant planet, roughly the size of Jupiter, passing in
front," said Muirhead.
To learn more about the star system, Muirhead and his colleagues turned to
the Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory near San Diego. Using a technique
called radial velocity, they discovered that the red dwarf was wobbling around
like a spinning top. The wobble was far too big to be caused by the tug of a
planet. That is when they knew they were looking at a massive white dwarf
passing behind the red dwarf, rather than a gas giant passing in front.
The team also incorporated ultraviolet measurements of KOI-256 taken by the
Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX), a NASA space telescope now operated by the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. The GALEX observations, led by
Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., are part of an ongoing program to measure
ultraviolet activity in all the stars in Kepler field of view, an indicator of
potential habitability for planets in the systems. These data revealed the red
dwarf is very active, consistent with being "spun-up" by the orbit of the more
massive white dwarf.
The astronomers then went back to the Kepler data and were surprised by what
they saw. When the white dwarf passed in front of its star, its gravity caused
the starlight to bend and brighten by measurable effects.
"Only Kepler could detect this tiny, tiny effect," said Doug Hudgins, the
Kepler program scientist at NASA Headquarters, Washington. "But with this
detection, we are witnessing Einstein's general theory of relativity at play in
a far-flung star system."
One of the consequences of Einstein's general theory of relativity is that
gravity bends light. Astronomers regularly observe this phenomenon, often called
gravitational lensing, in our galaxy and beyond. For example, the light from a
distant galaxy can be bent and magnified by matter in front of it. This reveals
new information about dark matter and dark energy, two mysterious ingredients in
our universe.
Gravitational lensing has also been used to discover new planets and hunt for
free-floating planets.
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