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Hobby-Eberly Telescope
Witnesses Vaporizing of a Cometlike Body by a Very Young Hot Star
16 April 2004—Evidence that a cometlike body with a diameter
of at least 100 kilometers fell into a massive, very young star
has been obtained by a team of astronomers at Penn State using the
9.2-meter Hobby-Eberly Telescope at the McDonald Observatory in
Texas. "This discovery is significant because this is the youngest
star ever found with this kind of infall of a cometlike body," says Jian Ge, assistant professor of astronomy
and astrophysics and the leader of the team. The other scientists
involved in the work are Abhijit Chakraborty, a
postdoctoral researcher in astronomy, and Suvrath Mahadevan,
a graduate student, both at Penn State.
The star, which astronomers identify as LkHalpha 234, is classified
as a Herbig Be star, which has a mass about six times the mass of
the sun and an estimated very young age of about 100,000 years.
"This detection indicates that solid bodies of 100 km in size
can form this early around a star," Ge explains. A report of
the work will appear in the 1 May 2004 issue of Astrophysical Journal
Letters.
The evidence of the infall comes from spectral analysis of the
young star's light, which has traveled about 3200 years to reach
Earth. Five sets of observations taken at intervals of 5 to 10 days
during October and November 2003 indicated that the stellar light
was absorbed by clouds of hydrogen and helium surrounding the star
as well as by emissions from these clouds. "The spectacular
appearances and disappearances of the neutral-sodium-absorption
lines on one particular observation and the absence of its correlation
with the hydrogen and helium lines suggests a cometlike body,"
says Chakraborty. "We know how hot the star is and how close
to the star the neutral sodium atoms can survive. From that, and
from the motion of the cometlike body during infall onto the star,
we calculated how large the body would have to be to get this close
to the star--one-tenth of the distance between the Sun and the Earth--before
vaporizing."
"This is a quite extraordinary event," said Eric
Feigelson, Penn State professor of astronomy and astrophysics,
who specializes in the study of young stars. "Something happened
on a time scale of days or less that created an enormous change
in the spectrum of this star while the astronomers were looking."
According to Feigelson, evidence for cometary infall has been seen
in the spectrum of the nearby star beta Pictoris, which is older
and less massive than LkHalpha 234, but not with the dramatic spectral
variations seen here.
The infall provides new data for understanding planetary formation
and the timescale involved in the evolution of a massive star system.
"The main reason we see comets in our solar system is that
large snowballs in the outer parts of the solar system are disturbed
by Jupiter's gravity," says Ge. "Eventually, some of the
snowballs fall towards the inner solar system and we see then as
comets." The observed infall of a cometlike body around LkH_234
may also point to disturbances produced by giant planets in this
young star system. The team is now monitoring a number of similar
stars and also LkH_234 in order to understand how common and how
often this type of cometlike body occurs around these young massive
stars.
This research was funded by the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration and the National Science Foundation.
[ Steve Miller ]
CONTACTS:
Jian Ge: jian@astro.psu.edu,
(+1)814-863-9553
Abhijit Chakraborty: (+1)814-863-6091
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): science@psu.edu,
(+1)814-863-4682
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