Credit: Institute of Science and
Technology Austria
In about 5 to 8 billion years, our
sun is expected to evolve into a white dwarf—an extremely dense, Earth-sized
stellar remnant that has exhausted its fuel and shed its outer layer. But while
our sun is a solitary star, research over the past 15 years has demonstrated
that binary or multi-star systems are far more common than astronomers once
thought. When a dense and compact remnant like a white dwarf is involved in a
binary system, it often "snatches away" material from its companion
star. This process, called accretion, usually emits X-rays in what is
considered a "signature" signal.
Now, scientists from the group of
Ilaria Caiazzo, assistant professor at the Institute of Science and Technology
Austria (ISTA), confirm the detection of an X-ray signal in not just one, but
two isolated objects called Gandalf and Moon-Sized. Highly magnetic and rapidly
rotating, these two objects are called "merger remnants" as they each
formed as a result of a violent cosmic collision. By emitting X-rays in the
absence of a companion, they now form a new class of their own.
Gandalf—the Lord of the Half Rings?
Gandalf is not exactly a fresh
discovery. Caiazzo first observed it during her postdoctoral research and
classified it as an interesting object due to signals that hint at the presence
of material around it.
Hydrogen emission spectra alternating
between two peaks over the remnant’s six-minute spin period indicate a
half-ring of material circling the star. Credit: Aayush Desai/Andrei
Cristea/ISTA
"We initially thought it was
a binary system," says Andrei Cristea, a Ph.D. student in the Caiazzo
group and first author of the paper published in Astronomy
& Astrophysics, about Gandalf. "At the remnant's extremely
high level of magnetism, its spin should be synchronized with its companion's
orbit, similarly to Earth's rotation with the moon's orbit," he adds.
However, the fastest orbit period observed to date is 80 minutes. Gandalf, on
the other hand, rotates on its axis every six minutes. According to Cristea,
this is but one of its puzzling features.
"If
Gandalf were involved in a binary system, it would have been highly
unsynchronized, which might have made it even more puzzling than it already is.
But we never found a companion. So, where does the circumstellar material come
from?"
To
help answer this question, the team drew on a clue from optical emission
spectra, an observation technique widely used in astronomy.
"We
saw hydrogen emission spectra that exhibited a double-peaked signature, similar
to cat ears," says Cristea. "Usually, this signature indicates the
presence of a disk of material surrounding a merger remnant. However, by
examining the signal more closely, we realized that it was alternating between
the two peaks over the remnant's six-minute spin period."
This
curious observation matched the existence of a half-ring of material circling
the star. "We have never seen anything like that before in any white
dwarf," he adds.
The
team went on to argue that for the material surrounding the merger remnant to
be trapped asymmetrically in a half-ring configuration, the object must have a
strong and asymmetric magnetic field.
For the surrounding material to be trapped in a
half-ring configuration, the object must have a strong and asymmetric magnetic
field, the ISTA scientists argue. Credit: Russell C. J. Kightley
"To note, white dwarfs of
similar age and evolutionary stage are typically nonmagnetic," says
Cristea. "While highly magnetic white dwarf remnants are already an
exception, Gandalf is now one of only two known merger remnants to feature asymmetric
magnetization." All these puzzling reasons led Cristea to name this
stellar object after the famous protagonist in J.R.R. Tolkien's novels, who
likes to speak in riddles.
Moon-Sized—Gandalf's more evolved twin?
Even though the team did not find a
companion for Gandalf, it might still have a "twin" in a completely
different area of the universe.
When Caiazzo published her discovery of a
white dwarf she called "Moon-Sized" in 2021, this stellar object presented a range of unique
properties. In addition to being very highly magnetic and rotating rapidly, it
also packed a mass equivalent to the sun into a size comparable to that of the
moon—or slightly larger, as the new evidence in an arXiv preprint led by
Aayush Desai, another Ph.D. student in the Caiazzo group, shows.
The ISTA astronomers found that
Moon-Sized and Gandalf share five distinct characteristics. In addition to
being ultra-massive, highly magnetic, and rapidly rotating, these two remnants
are also companionless, and they both emit X-rays. These five common properties
led the ISTA scientists to propose Gandalf and Moon-Sized as two members of a
new class of remnants.
However, the two objects also
differ significantly: unlike Gandalf, Moon-Sized shows no signs of material
surrounding it. In addition, while Gandalf is the result of a collision that
happened 60 to 70 million years ago, Moon-Sized is seven to eight times older,
as its merger event took place around 500 million years ago. Another important
difference is that Gandalf's X-ray emissions are 100 times brighter, suggesting
that Moon-Sized might be an older, more evolved "twin" that may be
losing its source of X-rays.
What are the criteria for defining a new class of stars or remnants?
Astronomers agree that the closer
an object is to us in the universe, the more likely it is to be common.
Nevertheless, any new object could spark interest in the community.
Caiazzo explains: "If we find
one new object in the vastness of the universe, what are the chances of it
being the only one? Usually, one stellar object with new characteristics is
more than enough for us to start looking for similar ones. But here, we
actually found two objects with five overlapping features. This is plenty for a
new class of star remnants!"
New class of star remnants. Researchers
at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) find two isolated,
ultra-massive, X-ray emitting, highly magnetic, and rapidly rotating white
dwarfs. Left to right: Ph.D. student Andrei Cristea, Assistant Professor Ilaria
Caiazzo, and Ph.D. student Aayush Desai. ISTA. Credit: ISTA
The
team proposes several scenarios to explain their findings, particularly the
source of the X-rays.
In
the first scenario, a highly magnetized star could rotate rapidly enough to
generate a powerful force that extracts material from itself. "This is my
favorite scenario because it only accounts for the white dwarf itself rather
than material originating from outside the star remnant," says Desai.
According to the team, this so-called outflow scenario is
known from highly magnetized neutron stars called pulsars, though it has never
been modeled in a white dwarf remnant.
In
their second scenario—this time involving an "inflow" of
material—they propose that a "leftover" trail of material originating
from the merger event may not have completely accreted onto the star remnant
following the blast. By orbiting around the merger remnant at high
eccentricity—meaning moving away over a large orbit, far from the star, before
returning closely—this trail could "fall back" on the remnant over
hundreds of millions of years.
In
their third scenario, the team explores another source of "inflow" of
external material.
"We
know that a third of white dwarfs are
'polluted,'" says Desai. "They are so dense that we would expect
external material, such as asteroids or even disrupted planetary bodies, to
collapse onto them." While Gandalf shows some signs of pollution, possibly
through carbon- or silicon-rich materials, the team did not detect such signals
from the considerably older Moon-Sized. "This scenario seems less likely,
as it does not fully explain why we see the X-rays in both objects right
now," Desai explains.
Although
the team has uncovered key insights about Moon-Sized and Gandalf, further
research is needed to understand how these stars might influence their
planetary systems.
"The
two objects we identified so far have lots of similarities, but also
differences," explains Desai. "Finding more such remnants will help
us exclude scenarios and perhaps find other explanations altogether."
For now, the challenge remains to determine whether any of the five overlapping parameters is decisive for belonging to this new class.
Provided by Institute of Science and Technology Austria
Source: Two's company: Scientists identify new class of star remnants



