Astronomers trace repeating cosmic signals to white dwarf binary system
An international research team led by the University of Sydney has identified the source of a mysterious class of repeating cosmic signals known as long-period radio transients. Using CSIRO’s ASKAP radio telescope in Australia, the scientists traced the signals to a rare stellar system called ASKAP J1745−5051, consisting of a white dwarf and a red dwarf locked in an extremely close orbit. The white dwarf, a dense remnant of a dead star roughly the size of Earth, is siphoning material from its red dwarf companion, which has about one-tenth the Sun’s mass. As the stolen matter spirals inward, the system emits radio waves and X-rays every 1.4 hours. The findings, published in Nature Astronomy, provide the first clear evidence linking these signals to a cataclysmic variable, or accreting white dwarf star. Lead author Kovi Rose, a PhD student at the University of Sydney and CSIRO, said the team confirmed the source for one of these transients comes from a white dwarf actively pulling material from a companion star. The system is only the second known long-period radio transient found to produce regular X-rays and the first where scientists have confirmed exactly what causes the periodic behavior.
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Sources: ScienceDaily
