Tech

“Black widow” neutron star takes an hour to orbit the star it’s roasting

Image of two jets of material, one of which is pointed near a star.

Enlarge / An artist’s impression of a neutron star getting ready to blast its neighbor with radiation. (credit: NASA)

Our Sun is on its own in this galaxy, without a nearby companion orbiting with it. But binary star systems are pretty common, and our nearest neighbor appears to be a three-star system. Given how many different types of stars there are, many multistar systems have a strange membership mix, with giant, unstable stars orbiting next to relatively mundane ones.

In Wednesday’s issue of Nature, researchers report on a rarity: a “black widow” neutron star that’s close enough to its companion to be blasting it with radiation. Should the process continue, it will ultimately lead to the star’s evaporation and death. And, just for good measure, the pair also has a distant companion that’s an old and rare dwarf star.

Searching for oddities

The work started in the archives of the Zwicky Transient Facility. The ZTF is designed to scan the entire sky in the Northern Hemisphere any two days and uses software to pick out anything that changes. Often, this would mean something blew up: A star suddenly brightens (in some cases becoming visible from Earth for the first time) because it has become visible from Earth for the first time.

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments