Space

Hubble reveals Mars-sized plasma balls shooting from a dying star

Hubble reveals Mars-sized plasma balls shooting from a dying star
Artist's concept of a plasma ball flying away from V Hydrae
Artist's concept of a plasma ball flying away from V Hydrae
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Panels showing the theoretical companion star orbiting V Hydrae, the companion going through the star's atmosphere, a plasma ball blasting from the accretion disk, and a series of plasma balls
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Panels showing the theoretical companion star orbiting V Hydrae, the companion going through the star's atmosphere, a plasma ball blasting from the accretion disk, and a series of plasma balls
Artist's concept of a plasma ball flying away from V Hydrae
2/2
Artist's concept of a plasma ball flying away from V Hydrae

Data from the Hubble Space Telescope has helped solve the mystery of a seemingly impossible star. The red giant V Hydrae is the wrong type of star to be shedding gigantic "cannonballs" of energetic plasma, but that's exactly what it has been doing once every 8.5 years over the past 400 years. Now on closer examination it appears the culprit is its invisible companion.

V Hydrae is an unremarkable star – or should be. Some 1,200 light years from Earth, it's an ancient red giant that long ago burned up most of its nuclear fuel and as it cooled, it shed at least half its mass to form a gigantic envelope.

Such a dying star isn't supposed to do anything particularly energetic, but over the past 400 years V Hydrae has been blasting plasma balls every 8.5 years. These balls are twice the mass of Mars and travel at speeds of about 500,000 mph (800,000 km). The question is, how does it do this? It's like finding a glacier that spontaneously bursts into flame.

In 2002 and again in 2011, a team led by Raghvendra Sahai of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California turned the Hubble's Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) on V Hydrae for two-year periods. According to the spectral data, a string of balls of plasma heated to over 17,000º F (9,400º C) and dating back to 1986 were seen moving away from the star. These formed structures that are 37 billion miles (60 billion km) from V Hydrae, or eight times the distance of the Kuiper belt from the Sun.

The team says that these plasma balls were most likely due to a superdense companion star, like a white dwarf or neutron star. Too small to be seen, the star circles V Hydrae in a highly elliptical orbit with a period of 8.5 years. As it comes to the closest point in its orbit, it plunges into the vacuous outer atmosphere of V Hydrae and starts to rapidly absorb gases.

Panels showing the theoretical companion star orbiting V Hydrae, the companion going through the star's atmosphere, a plasma ball blasting from the accretion disk, and a series of plasma balls
Panels showing the theoretical companion star orbiting V Hydrae, the companion going through the star's atmosphere, a plasma ball blasting from the accretion disk, and a series of plasma balls

These form an accretion disk around the companion as the gases circle in. As the mass of captured matter builds up, it eventually becomes too great and balls of plasma blast away at high speed. Because the disk wobbles, the direction of the balls flip flops occasionally. As the blobs move away from V Hydrae, they cool until they can only be seen by the Submillimeter Array in Hawaii.

"This accretion disk engine is stable because it's been able to launch these structures for hundreds of years without falling apart," says Sahai. "In many of these systems, the gravitational attraction can cause the companion to actually spiral into the core of the red giant star. Eventually, though, the orbit of V Hydrae's companion will continue to decay because it's losing energy in this frictional interaction. However, we do not know the ultimate fate of this companion."

The team believes the mechanism that produced the plasma balls flying away from V Hydrae could help explain the complex nebulae that surround dying stars. Similar knots have been seen in such structures and could have been made by companion stars and accretion dishes.

The team plans to continue using the Hubble to observe V Hydrae in conjunction with the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile, which will seek much older plasma balls that can only be seen in the infrared range.

The research was published in The Astrophysical Journal.

Source: JPL

4 comments
4 comments
Dus10
Electric Sun theory anyone? Makes more sense than nuclear.
Cigarshaped
The only theory that makes any sense! A current driven plasma discharge will 'burp' material if it receives an excess current burst. Hence planets and moons are simply the molten excess from an ever-changing stellar environment.
If accretion discs worked then let's see some evidence or experiments to demonstrate this absurd concept! Gravity is so weak. An arbitary event cannot produce the consistent star formation we see in REAL Nature.
MK23666
How does the Electric Sun theory make more sense?
Cigarshaped
Virtually all the solar attributes are reproducible in the laboratory, if you forget the gravity method and use plasma discharge. Gravity model cannot be reproduced in a laboratory, not even a nuclear fusion reactor. The list of unexplained phenomena left by the consensus theory is enormous.
Thunderbolts Project is well on the way, testing the plasma model with their $million SAFIRE experiment, in Canada. The fact that all stars have similar properties shows that a random 'accretion' process is statistically implausible. The whole concept of colour = age (HRDiagram) is so much simpler if you relate colour to amount of electric current drawn by the discharge. Hot, high temp = Blue, Warm = red, Cool = brown - we don't know how old they are.
If there are magnetic fields in space there are electric currents. Charge differential across vast distances, Birkeland currents spanning millions of light years - connecting clusters, galaxies and stars. It's a fantastic simple notion.