STAR WITH MIDRIFF BULGE EYED BY ASTRONOMERS
25-July-2001
Article courtesy of JPL
Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Caltech/Steve Golden
For the first time ever, a star spinning so fast its mid-
section is stretched out has been directly measured by an
ultra-high-resolution NASA telescope system on Palomar
Mountain near San Diego.
"Measuring the shape of this star, Altair, was as
difficult as standing in Los Angeles, looking at a hen's egg
in New York, and trying to prove that it's oval-shaped and not
circular," said Dr. Charles Beichman, chief scientist for
astronomy and physics at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif.
Altair is a well-known member of the Summer Triangle,
clearly visible in the summer night sky across the United
States. Scientists using the Palomar Testbed Interferometer,
which links multiple telescopes, measured the star's radius at
different angles on the sky. They noticed the size of the star
varied with changing angles, which was the first tip-off that
Altair is not perfectly round.
"This surprising observation led to a bit of challenging
detective work to properly interpret the data," said principal
investigator Dr. Gerard van Belle of JPL. "We measured the
size of another star, Vega, at the same time, which didn't
change with angle, so we knew this wasn't just a fluke of the
telescope."
Previous studies of Altair raised the prospect that the
star might have midriff bulge, but never before had the shape
been measured directly. Earlier measurements of the star's
spectrum, or light-wave pattern, had hinted that Altair was
rotating very fast. When a gaseous orb, like a star, spins
fast enough, it tends to expand at the middle, like a beach
ball that is squeezed at the top and bottom.
Altair is a perfect example -- it rotates at least once
every 10.4 hours, and the new Palomar observations reveal the
diameter at its equator is at least 14 percent greater than
at its poles. For a star that spins slowly, this effect is
miniscule. For example, our Sun rotates once every 30 days and
has an equator only .001 percent greater in diameter than its
poles.
By measuring Altair's size at separate positions along
its edge, van Belle and his colleagues determined that Altair
rotates at a speed of at least 210 kilometers per second
(470,000 miles per hour) at the equator. Future studies may
pin down the speed more precisely.
"Determining the shape of another star helps us learn
about the forces that control the shape and structure of all
stars, including our star, the Sun," Beichman said. "This
tells us more about the Sun's behavior and ultimate fate."
The Palomar Testbed Interferometer has three 50-
centimeter (20-inch) telescopes. To study Altair, the
telescopes were used two at a time. The combined light from
the telescope pairs provided sharpness comparable to a
telescope as large as a football field.
"Altair is the twelfth brightest star in the sky -- you'd
think that everything there is to know about this star would
have been discovered already," said co-investigator Dr. David
Ciardi of the University of Florida, Gainesville. "It's a good
example of the surprises you're going to encounter when you
are able to look at even familiar stars with unprecedented
resolution."
The Palomar Testbed Interferometer is paving the way for
the Keck Interferometer, Space Interferometry Mission and
Terrestrial Planet Finder, all part of NASA's Origins
program. The program will hunt for Earthlike planets that
might harbor life around other stars. "In the long run, we'll
use these interferometric capabilities to search for planets
around nearby stars. This is an important first step," said
Beichman.
Van Belle and Ciardi co-authored the Altair paper,
scheduled to appear in the October 1 issue of the
Astrophysical Journal, with Robert Thompson of JPL and the
University of Wyoming, Laramie; Dr. Rachel Akeson of the
JPL/Caltech Infrared Processing and Analysis Center, Pasadena,
Calif.; and Dr. Elizabeth Lada of the University of Florida,
Gainesville.
Their research was funded by NASA's Office of Space
Science, Washington, D.C., along with the National Science
Foundation. Palomar Observatory is owned and operated by the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, which also
manages JPL for NASA. The Palomar Testbed Interferometer was
designed and built by a team of JPL researchers led by Drs.
Mark Colavita and Michael Shao. Funded by NASA and managed by
JPL, the interferometer is located at the Palomar Observatory
near the historic 200-inch Hale Telescope.
Images and animation of Altair are available at
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/images/stars/index.html.
Information on the Palomar Testbed Interferometer is available at
http://huey.jpl.nasa.gov/palomar.
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