Major Flares Are Predictable on Far-Away Stars, Analysis of Radio Observations Reveals
22 August 2003 --
For the first time, astronomers
are able to predict when major flares—enormous explosions that shoot
hot gases into space—will erupt on stars outside our solar system,
according to research to be published in an upcoming issue of the
Astrophysical
Journal.
The research is based on data from the longest-running continuous radio
survey of flares produced by two types of binary systems, each containing
a pair of stars under the influence of each other's gravity. Stars in
both binary systems, located about 95 light years from our solar system,
are like a younger version of our Sun. "Studying the flares on these
stars can help us understand more about how life evolved on Earth because
they indicate the kind of environment that was bombarding our planet during
an earlier age," says
Mercedes Richards, professor of astronomy
and astrophysics at Penn State University and the leader of the survey
team.
During their 5-year-long observations, the researchers used the Green
Bank Interferometer in West Virginia to continuously monitor radio waves
produced by flares on pairs of stars as they circle each other like partners
in a dance, regularly eclipsing each other when viewed from Earth. They
studied two systems of such stars, one known as "The Demon Star,"
or "Beta Persei," which is the brightest and closest eclipsing
binary pair in the sky. It contains a hot, blue star along with a cool,
orange-colored star that is like our Sun but a bit more active. The other
system, known as "V711 Tauri" to indicate its location in the
constellation Taurus, also contains relatively cool stars like our Sun,
one orange-colored and the other slightly hotter and yellow-colored.
Cool, Sun-like stars have an outer convective zone that produces a magnetic
field. The pattern of a star's flares reveal how its magnetic field is
changing. "We were trying to discover the magnetic cycle within these
stars by detecting a pattern in their strongest flares," Richards
explains. The strength of flares in a binary pair is related to the age
and speed of rotation of the cooler star. "Because we discovered
that these flares occur at regular intervals, we now can predict accurately
when future flares will occur," she says.
Since the strength of the Sun's magnetic activity is relatively weak,
astronomers have needed to accumulate close to 100 years of observations
in order to get enough data to determine the Sun's cycle of flare strength.
The binary stars the team studied are younger than our Sun and are spinning
about 10 times faster, so their flares are about 10 times more powerful
and the astronomers were able to discover their interval pattern much
more quickly.
The team's observations of these two objects lasted from January 1995
until October 2000, when the Green Bank Interferometer was shut down.
"Our continuous monitoring demonstrated that Beta Per and V711 Tau
have active cycles and inactive cycles," Richards says. "This
fact would not have been established if the systems had only been monitored
sporadically. We could never be absolutely sure that no flares occurred
at certain times unless we were monitoring the system all the time."
Richards and her collaborators used two independent statistical techniques
to find out how often radio flares occur in these systems. They found
that flares occur every 50 to 120 days in both systems. The survey also
suggested a longer cycle of flares that lasted more than 500 days, or
1.4 years, with a pattern of active flaring and then very little flaring
activity, but this long-term cycle could not be confirmed by the statistical
analysis because the survey was not long enough to yield results that
reach the usual criterion for statistical significance.
When Richards divided the long-term flare cycle by the rotation period
of the cool star, she realized that the flaring cycles in the two binary
systems may be related to magnetic cycles like the 11-year sunspot cycle
on the Sun. "Now that we have begun to understand more about the
flaring cycles on other stars, we may be able to better understand flaring
in general, including the 11-year cycle of flares from our Sun, which
regularly disrupts communications satellites on Earth," Richards
says.
In addition to Richards, the research team includes
Elizabeth Waltman
of the Naval Research Laboratory,
Frank Ghigo
of the National Radio
Astronomy Observatory, and
Donald Richards
of Penn State.
[ B K K / M R ]
CONTACTS
:
Mercedes Richards: (+1) 814-865-0150,
mtr@astro.psu.edu
Barbara Kennedy
(PIO): (+1) 814-863-4682,
science@psu.edu
CREDITS
:
Continuous monitoring of radio flares requires the availability of a dedicated telescope like the Green Bank Interferometer—a facility of the National Science Foundation that was operated during the collection of these data by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory with funding from the United States Naval Observatory, the Naval Research Laboratory, the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, and NASA's High Energy Astrophysics Program. The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation, operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc. Richards received funding for this research from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the National Science Foundation, and NASA.
