Canada Standard
CanadaStandard.com Friday 10th February 2012 Edition 066/2012
Follow us on Follow us on TwitterFollow us on facebook
  • More Arts News

  • US stocks fall amid Greece uncertainties
  • US stocks drop on Greece worries
  • Kellan Lutz wants more 'Twilight' film
  • Oscar is boring: Dustin Hoffman
    Get Arts News headlines emailed to you daily.

    Milky Way's fastest stars circle each other at 500 kms a second
    Canada Standard
    Saturday 13th March, 2010  
    (ANI)


    Astronomers have confirmed that two extremely dense stars in an intimate dance are spinning around each other in just 5.4 minutes at about 500 kilometers a second, making them the fastest known stellar partners in the galaxy.

    The whirling duo, known as HM Cancri, also has the tightest orbit of any known "binary" star system.

    Both stars are white dwarfs-the dense, white-hot remnants left behind when sunlike stars die.

    The stellar corpses are separated by no more than three times the width of Earth.

    In such tight quarters, hot gases flow between the two stars, releasing huge amounts of energy.

    "This is the most extreme example of one of these double white dwarf systems we have so far," study co-author Danny Steeghs of the University of Warwick in the UK, told National Geographic News.

    Study leader Gijs Roelofs, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, was part of the team that first detected periodic x-ray emissions from HM Cancri in 1999.

    Initial observations had suggested a 5.4-minute orbit, but the researchers weren't sure if the pulses of light were coming from two circling stars or one superfast spinner.

    To confirm the stars' dizzying tango, Roelofs and colleagues turned to the world's second largest optical telescope, at the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii, where they measured "wobbles" in the system's brightness.

    "The amplitude of the wobble gives you an idea of the orbit period and the masses" of the stars, co-author Steeghs said.

    What's more, light emissions from the stars were found to be moving in opposite directions, as such emissions would for two orbiting bodies, cinching the case for a binary system.

    HM Cancri's record-breaking orbit couldn't get much quicker, Steeghs added, since the stars would merge if they got any closer, triggering a massive explosion known as a type Ia supernova.

    "Overall, three minutes would be the fastest a binary white dwarf system could get," he said. (ANI)


      Email this story to a friend

    Have your say on this story

    Your nickname (required)
    Message