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Amid the liveliest stars in the cosmos lie stellar corpses.
Of these dead stars, the most abundant are white dwarfs — stars that in their
prime were similar to the sun. These dense corpses foreshadow what will become
of most of the stars in the universe.
Although white dwarfs are dead, they aren’t useless.
Postmortem examination shows they have different masses and different chemical
makeups. Some are strongly magnetic. Others pulsate. A few even have orbiting
planets and debris disks. “Understanding why these cadavers are all different
might help us understand the lives of normal stars,” says Patrick Dufour, an
astronomer at the
That is why Dufour and others perform what he calls a “kind
of autopsy” on these stars. But unlike human pathologists who can carry out
up-close and personal inspections, white dwarf astronomers are limited to their
sense of sight and telescopes to dissect their corpses.
Among the most intriguing of white dwarfs are the ones that
pulsate, says Donald Winget, an astrophysicist at the
Taking a pulse
So far, astronomers have discovered three families of white dwarfs, which, on average, are about the mass of the sun and fit into a space about the size of Earth. That mass-to-space ratio makes these stars extremely dense, about 200,000 times Earth’s density. What distinguishes one type of white dwarf from another is its veneer. This outer coat may be composed of hydrogen, helium or, as Dufour discovered last year, carbon. Then in May, Winget and his colleagues found that one of these new carbon-veneered white dwarfs pulsates too.
Thinking about a pulsating white dwarf might elicit imagery
of a star expanding and contracting. But pulsating white dwarfs do not throb
this way. Because of their strong gravity, much of the motion is a “sloshing”
of material around the star, not an in-and-out motion, says astrophysicist Agnes
Kim of
When the material “splashes” together on the star’s surface
and that region becomes hot, astronomers see the pulsations as a brightening,
Kim says. Where the stellar material pulls apart, the temperature drops, and
astronomers see the region dim.
Measuring white dwarf pulsations is similar to measuring
seismic waves traveling through the Earth. Because parallels exist between
seismological vibrations and white dwarf vibrations, astronomers dubbed the
technique asteroseismology. Winget thinks of the stars’ vibrations in terms of
hearing a bell. “From its ring you can tell the size of the bell and what it is
made of,” he says. “How it shakes or vibrates tells about its structure.”
Similarly, measuring light vibrations reveals data about a white dwarf’s
structure and chemical composition.
“But white dwarfs aren’t doing any nuclear reactions. They have no energy source,” notes Michael Montgomery, an astrophysicist and a colleague of Winget’s at UT Austin. “So, it’s like when you take a hot lump of coal out of the fire; it just sits there and cools off. These stars are like those lone lumps of coal. They are just sitting there cooling off.”
“I think of these stars like a heated bell,” Kim says. “As the bell’s metal cools, it will change temperature and density, and therefore the sound, the pitch of it, will change slightly. The same is true for the white dwarf, so the frequency of the light pulses change slowly too.”
Kim’s research uses pulsating dwarfs to look for clues to
the nature of the dark matter that lurks unseen in space. Digging through the
observational literature, she found 30 years’ worth of data tracking one
dwarf’s pulsation and cooling. She observed the star and correlated how fast
its pulse periods were changing with how fast it was cooling and determined how
much energy the star should be losing.
The measurements allowed room for extra cooling from unseen particles, she says. For her doctoral thesis last year, Kim argued that the star was giving off subatomic particles including neutrinos and the theorized, but undetected, axion. Axions were “invented” to solve a problem in the standard model of particle physics, which describes nature’s forces and the basic building blocks of matter. Axions could also make up the dark matter needed to explain unexpected motions observed in galaxies and galaxy clusters.
Not much is known about the particles, though, since, if
they exist, they have so far eluded physicists’ traps. To place a limit on how
massive axions could be, Kim began by assuming that they were released as a
white dwarf lost heat. Axions cannot contribute too much to cooling. Otherwise,
“we would definitely see the pulse periods change faster than we do,” she says.
She concluded that the axion mass should be less than 25 milli-electronvolts,
or meV. An electron’s mass is around 500 kiloelectronvolts, roughly 20 million
times greater. The findings appeared in The Astrophysical Journal in
March. (The preprint of the paper is online at arxiv.org/abs/0711.2041.)
More recently, Jordi Isern of the Blanes Advanced Studies
Centre’s
“The jury is still out on these results, and the Spanish
authors admit there are many things they did not take into account,”
Techniques used to put mass limits on particles are not limited to axions. Astronomers can predict upper mass limits for neutrinos and other proposed dark matter candidates too, Kim says. Finding a limit for the particle candidates’ masses is a first step to figuring out what dark matter is, Winget says.
Ending in style
White dwarfs have already played a role in discovering another of the universe’s dark secrets — dark energy. That’s the term astronomers use to describe a mysterious force causing the universe to expand at an accelerating rate.
Evidence for dark energy came in the 1990s from studies of
type 1a supernovas, believed to occur when a white dwarf explodes after
stealing matter from a nearby companion. So much mass piles up on the white
dwarf that its core can no longer support its mass, leading to nuclear
detonation in a flash as bright as a billion suns.
Because white dwarfs should all explode after reaching a similar mass — about 1.4 times the sun’s mass —the explosions should all produce about the same brightness. So astronomers consider white dwarf supernovas “standard candles” for measuring distances to far-off galaxies. Since light from distant galaxies represents conditions in the universe long ago, studying these explosions can reveal details of cosmic history. To astronomers’ surprise, supernova data showed the universe’s expansion was accelerating, not slowing as previously believed.
Further explanations for the cause of the acceleration
require more precise data about white dwarf supernovas. It turns out that they
do not really all explode with the same brightness, so astronomers need more
information on the mass and makeup of white dwarfs, and on how they explode, to
make appropriate corrections in the calculations.
“We have come to realize that these supernovae explode by
the same mechanism, but there are different things going on. Some explode at a
slightly smaller mass, some at slightly heavier mass,” says astrophysicist
Sumner Starrfield of
In February, astronomers from
Astronomers might be able to use that long-handled spoon not only to get a taste of white dwarf interiors, but also to investigate the possibility of planets or other objects orbiting the star.
Getting around
About three years ago, astrophysicist Eric Becklin, now at
Further evidence for whether an object orbits a white dwarf
could come from studying the timing of the stellar corpse’s pulsations. Because
time can be tracked with such precision, astronomers know exactly how many
seconds or minutes should elapse between one pulse and the next — unless there
is an exoplanet lurking in the shadows.
If a big object is going around the white dwarf,
Looking for those signature changes in pulsations in 15
white dwarfs, Mullally has so far found only one beginning to show the patterns
expected when an exoplanet orbits the star. “The problem with white dwarfs is
that we should be finding planets like Jupiter, meaning they have an orbit that
takes several years,” he says.
Mullally has been tracking his candidate star for about five years but has only seen half to two-thirds of the signature light pattern a planet’s presence should show. Soon the pulsations should show a delay. If they do, that would complete the planet’s signature pattern, he says.
Further prospects for success in finding planets around
white dwarfs comes from Roberto Silvotti of the Osservatorio Astronomico di
Capodimonte in
Another way to seek signs of these planets could emerge from the metallic, dusty debris disks surrounding Becklin’s white dwarfs. Three of those stars pulsate. Astronomers would like to find a signature variation in the light pulses that might characterize the debris disks.
Winget says he and others could then look at the light
signatures from the roughly 200 pulsating white dwarfs so far discovered and
figure out what fraction of them have orbiting asteroids, debris disks and
possibly even planets.
“This is an important area,” Winget says, “because we ultimately learn more about the fate of solar systems.” And maybe, he adds, “we could even better understand what will happen to our own.”
- Explore more
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- Winget, D., and S. Kepler. 2008. Pulsating white dwarf stars and precision asteroseismology. Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics 46(September):157-199. Available at [Go to].
- Jura, M., B. Zuckerman, and E.E. Becklin. In press. Infrared emission from the dusty disk orbiting GD 362, an externally-polluted white dwarf. Astrophysical Journal. Available at arXiv:astro-ph/0701469v1.
- Isern, J., et al. 2008. Axions and the cooling of white dwarf stars. Astrophysical Journal Letters 682(Aug. 1):L109–L112. Available at [Go to].
- Bischoff-Kim, A., M. Montgomery, and D.E. Winget. 2008. Strong limits on the DFSZ axion mass with G117-B15A. Astrophysical Journal 675(March 10):1512–1517. DOI: 10.1086/526398. Available at arxiv.org/ arXiv:0711.2041.
- Voss, R., and G. Nelemans. 2008. Discovery of the progenitor of the type Ia supernova 2007on. Nature 451(Feb. 14):802-804.
- Silvotti, R., et al. 2007. A giant planet orbiting the “extreme horizontal branch” star V 391 Pegasi. Nature 449(Sept. 13):180-191.
- Fortney, J. 2007. The one that got away. Nature 449(Sept. 13):147-148.
- Patat, F., et al. 2007. Detection of circumstellar material in a normal type Ia Supernova. Science 317(Aug. 17):924-926. DOI: 10.1126/science.1143005.
- Becklin, E., et. al. 2005. A dusty disk around GD 362, a white dwarf with a uniquely high photospheric metal abundance. Astrophysical Journal 632:L119-L122. Available at [Go to].

How was it determined that a pulsating white dwarf lost a second in 10 million years?
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