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ESO Press Release 31/03
18 November 2003
For immediate release
Biggest Star in Our Galaxy Sits within a
Rugby-Ball Shaped Cocoon
VLT Interferometer Gives Insight Into the
Shape of Eta Carinae
Summary
Ever since 1841, when the until then inconspicuous southern
star Eta Carinae underwent a spectacular outburst,
astronomers have wondered what exactly is going on in this
unstable giant star. However, due to its considerable distance
- 7,500 light-years - details of the star itself were beyond
observation.
This star is known to be surrounded by the Homunculus
Nebula, two mushroom-shaped clouds ejected by the star,
each of which is hundreds of times larger than our solar
system.
Now, for the first time, infrared interferometry with the
VINCI instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope Interferometer
(VLTI) enabled an international team of astronomers [1]
to zoom-in on the inner part of its stellar wind. For Roy
van Boekel, leader of the team, these results indicate
that "the wind of Eta Carinae turns out to be extremely
elongated and the star itself is highly unstable because of
its fast rotation."
PR
Photo 32a/03: The Immediate Surroundings of Eta
Carinae (NAOS-CONICA/YEPUN).
PR
Photo 32b/03: The Highly Unstable Star Eta Carinae
(Artist's Impression)
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A monster in the southern sky
_files/phot-32a-03-icon.jpg)
ESO PR Photo 32a/03
[Preview
- JPEG: 549 x 400 pix - 60k [Normal
- JPEG: 1098 x 800 pix - 566k] |
Caption: The image to the left in PR Photo
32a/03 shows the mushroom-shaped clouds, known as the
Homunculus Nebula, that surround the massive star
Eta Carinae (Credit: NASA/ESA HST). To the right is an
image obtained with the VLT NACO adaptive-optics camera that
reveals the structure of the star's immediate surroundings.
The central region displays a complex morphology of luminous
objects. |
Eta Carinae, the most luminous star known in our Galaxy,
is by all standards a real monster: it is 100 times more massive
than our Sun and 5 million times as luminous. This star has now
entered the final stage of its life and is highly unstable. It
undergoes giant outbursts from time to time; one of the most recent
happened in 1841 and created the beautiful bipolar nebula known as
the Homunculus Nebula (see ESO PR Photo 32a/03). At
that time, and despite the comparatively large distance - 7,500
light-years - Eta Carinae briefly became the second brightest star
in the night sky, surpassed only by Sirius.
Eta Carinae is so big that, if placed in our solar system,
it would extend beyond the orbit of Jupiter. This large size,
though, is somewhat arbitrary. Its outer layers are continually
being blown into space by radiation pressure - the impact of photons
on atoms of gas. Many stars, including our Sun, lose mass because of
such "stellar winds", but in the case of Eta Carinae, the
resulting mass loss is enormous (about 500 Earth-masses a year) and
it is difficult to define the border between the outer layers of the
star and the surrounding stellar wind region.
Now, VINCI and NAOS-CONICA, two infrared-sensitive instuments on
ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) at the Paranal Observatory (Chile),
have probed the shape of the stellar wind region for the first time.
Looking down into the stellar wind as far as possible, the
astronomers could infer some of the structure of this enigmatic
object.
The astronomer team [1]
first used the NAOS-CONICA adaptive optics camera [2],
attached to the 8.2-m VLT YEPUN telescope, to image the hazy
surroundings of Eta Carinae, with a spatial resolution
comparable to the size of the solar system, cf. PR Photo
32a/03.
This image shows that the central region of the Homunculus nebula
is dominated by an object that is seen as a point-like light source
with many luminous "blobs" in the immediate vicinity.
Towards the limit
In order to obtain an even sharper view, the astronomers then
turned to interferometry. This technique combines two or more
telescopes to achieve an angular resolution [3]
equal to that of a telescope as large as the separation of the
individual telescopes (cf. ESO
PR 06/01 and ESO
PR 23/01).
For the study of the rather bright star Eta Carinae the
full power of the 8.2-m VLT telescopes is not required. The
astronomers thus used VINCI, the VLT INterferometer Commissioning
Instrument [4],
together with two 35-cm siderostat test telescopes that served to
obtain "First Light" with the VLT Interferometer in March 2001 (see
ESO
PR 06/01).
The siderostats were placed at selected positions on the VLT
Observing Platform at the top of Paranal to provide different
configurations and a maximum baseline of 62 meters. During several
nights, the two small telescopes were pointed towards Eta
Carinae and the two light beams were directed towards a common
focus in the VINCI test instrument in the centrally located VLT
Interferometric Laboratory. It was then possible to measure the
angular size of the star (as seen in the sky) in different
directions.
Pushing the spatial resolution of this configuration to the
limit, the astronomers succeeded in resolving the shape of the
outer layer of Eta Carinae. They were able to provide spatial
information on a scale of 0.005 arcsec, that is about 11 AU (1650
million km) at the distance of Eta Carinae, corresponding to
the full size of the orbit of Jupiter.
Scaled down to terrestial dimensions, this achievement
compares to making the distinction between an egg and a billiard
ball at a distance of 2,000 kilometers.
A most unusual shape
_files/phot-32b-03-icon.jpg)
ESO PR Photo 32b/03
[Preview
- JPEG: 400 x 500 pix - 28k [Normal
- JPEG: 800 x 999 pix - 302k] |
Caption: PR Photo 32b/03 is an
artist's impression of the unstable star Eta Carinae,
based on the new knowledge gained from measurements with the
VLT Interferometer (VLTI). The inner elongated shape is the
central star, as it would be visible in the absence of the
stellar wind. The larger rugby-ball shape indicates the region
where the strong stellar wind becomes opaque to VINCI. The
longer axis of the system is found to coincide with the
direction of the bipolar outflow, both on large and small
scales. |
The VLTI observations brought the astronomers a surprise. They
indicate that the wind around Eta Carinae is amazingly
elongated: one axis is one-and-a-half times longer than the other!
Moreover, the longer axis is found to be aligned with the direction
in which the much larger mushroom-shaped clouds (seen on less sharp
images) were ejected.
Spanning a scale from 10 to 20-30,000 AU, the star itself and
the Homunculus Nebula are thus closely aligned in space.
VINCI was able to detect the boundary where the stellar wind from
Eta Carinae becomes so dense that it is no longer transparent.
Apparently, this stellar wind is much stronger in the direction
of the long axis than of the short axis.
According to mainstream theories, stars lose most mass around
their equator. This is because this is where the stellar wind gets
"lifting" assistance from the centrifugal force caused by the star's
rotation. However, if this were so in the case of Eta
Carinae, the axis of rotation (through the star's poles) would
then be perpendicular to both mushroom-shaped clouds. But it is
virtually impossible that the mushroom clouds are positioned like
spokes in a wheel, relative to the rotating star. The matter ejected
in 1841 would then have been stretched into a ring or torus.
For Roy van Boekel, "the current overall picture only
makes sense if the stellar wind of Eta Carinae is elongated in
the direction of its poles. This is a surprising reversal of the
usual situation, where stars (and planets) are flattened at the
poles due to the centrifugal force.
The next supernova?
Such an exotic shape for Eta Carinae-type stars was predicted by
theoreticians. The main assumption is that the star itself, which is
located deep inside its stellar wind, is flattened at the poles for
the usual reason. However, as the polar areas of this central zone
are then closer to the centre where nuclear fusion processes take
place, they will be hotter. Consequently, the radiation pressure in
the polar directions will be higher and the outer layers above the
polar regions of the central zone will get more "puffed up" than the
outer layers at the equator.
Assuming this model is correct, the rotation of Eta
Carinae can be calculated. It turns out that it should spin
at over 90 percent of the maximum speed possible (before
break-up).
Eta Carinae has experienced large outbursts other than the one in
1841, most recently around 1890. Whether another outburst will
happen again in the near future is unknown, but it is certain that
this unstable giant star will not settle down.
At the present, it is losing so much mass so rapidly that nothing
will be left of it after less than 100,000 years. More likely,
though, Eta Carinae will destroy itself long before that in a
supernova blast that could possibly become visible in the daytime
sky with the naked eye. This may happen "soon" on the astronomical
time-scale, perhaps already within the next 10-20,000 years.
More information
The research presented in this Press Release was published as a
Letter to the Editor in the European astronomy journal Astronomy
and Astrophysics ("Direct measurement of the size and shape of
the present-day stellar wind of Eta Carinae", by Roy van Boekel
et al., A&A 410, L37-L40).
Notes
[1]: The team is composed of Roy van
Boekel (ESO and the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands),
Pierre Kervella, Francesco Paresce and Markus Schöller
(ESO), Wolfgang Brandner, Tom Herbst and Rainer
Lenzen (MPI for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany), Alex de
Koter and Rens Waters (University of Amsterdam, The
Netherlands), John Hillier (University of Pittsburgh, USA),
and Anne-Marie Lagrange (Observatoire de Grenoble,
France).
[2]: The Nasmyth Adaptive Optics System (NAOS)
has been developed by a French Consortium including the Office
National d'Etudes et de Recherches Aérospatiales (ONERA), the
Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Grenoble (LAOG) and Observatoire de
Paris (DESPA and DASGAL), in collaboration with ESO. The CONICA
Near-Infrared CAmera has been developed by the Max-Planck-Institut
für Astronomie (MPIA, Heidelberg) and the Max-Planck-Institut für
Extraterrestrische Physik (MPE, Garching), with an extensive ESO
collaboration. See ESO
PR 25/01.
[3]: The achievable angular resolution is
inversely proportional to the aperture of a telescope for single
telescope observation, and to the length of the "baseline" between
two telescopes for an interferometric observation. However,
interferometric observations with two telescopes will improve the
resolution only in the direction parallel to this baseline, while
the resolution in the perpendicular direction will remain that of a
single telescope. Nevertheless, the use of other telescope pairs
with different baseline orientations "adds" resolution in other
directions.
[4]: The VINCI instrument was built under ESO
contract at the Observatoire de Paris (France) and the camera in
this instrument was delivered by the Max-Planck-Institute für
Extraterrestrische Physik (Garching, Germany). The IR detector and
the IRACE detector electronics were supplied by ESO.
Contacts
Roy van Boekel Sterrenkundig Instituut University of
Amsterdam The Netherlands Phone: +31 20 525 7472 email: vboekel@science.uva.nl
Markus Schöller European Southern
Observatory Santiago, Chile Phone: +56 2 463 3102 email:
mschoell@eso.org
Tom Herbst Max-Planck-Institut für
Astronomie Heidelberg, Germany Phone: +49 6221 528
223 email: herbst@mpia.de
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