First Planet Known To Orbit a White Dwarf Is Falling Apart (nasa.gov) 67
schwit1 writes: It's virtually certain that some white dwarfs still have planets in orbit despite their violent histories, but seeing those planets has proven difficult... at least, until now. Astronomers using the Kepler space observatory have spotted a planet circling around WD 1145+017, a white dwarf 570 light years away. Not that it's in great shape, mind you. The unusual light signature (PDF) from the dying star hints that the planet is disintegrating under the star's gravitational pressure, leaving behind a giant dust cloud. Researchers suspect it fell into its fatal orbit after the star's rapid change in mass triggered a planetary collision.
You should see more discoveries like this in the future, since the weaker light of a white dwarf is less likely to obscure planets. There's even a chance (however small) that collisions have bumped some planets into habitable zones, giving scientists an unusually clear view of worlds that could support life. Either way, it's evident that planetary systems don't vanish simply because their host stars are running out of time.
You should see more discoveries like this in the future, since the weaker light of a white dwarf is less likely to obscure planets. There's even a chance (however small) that collisions have bumped some planets into habitable zones, giving scientists an unusually clear view of worlds that could support life. Either way, it's evident that planetary systems don't vanish simply because their host stars are running out of time.
I new Al Gore was an Alien! (Score:2)
http://www.theonion.com/articl... [theonion.com]
Star's rapid change in mass? (Score:3)
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I would think that in a red giant or even black hole stage it would still have the same mass.
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From TFA:
Re: Star's rapid change in mass? (Score:3)
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"gradually lose about half their mass,"
"Still doesn't change mass"
So losing half the mass doesn't change the mass?
Re: Star's rapid change in mass? (Score:4, Insightful)
The mass of the star has changed, in that perhaps half of its mass has been expelled into a planetary nebula. That expelled mass is beyond the planet's orbit, and the orbit of the planet is subsequently determined only by the remaining stellar mass. Also, that expelled mass is moving away from the remaining white dwarf, and is being diluted in interstellar space. I've forgotten enough college physics to be unable to say what the expected effect on the planet is due to the combined effects of the force of expulsion and the reduced mass of the central star on the planet's orbit should be (does it move in or out, etc).
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I've forgotten enough college physics to be unable to say what the expected effect on the planet is due to the combined effects of the force of expulsion and the reduced mass of the central star on the planet's orbit should be (does it move in or out, etc).
Ah, I still remember that extremely painful integration in BC Calculus.
The planet's orbit increases due to the decrease in stellar mass: F = G M1 M2 / r^2 . (The stellar mass expanded around the planet will asymptotically cancel itself out as the mass expansion radius grows large relative to the planet's orbit.)
It's tricky to mentally model the effect of force expulsion on the planet. But if it interacted significantly with the planet, it would have forced it radially outwards with a relatively short imp
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It's been nice proving you wrong.
Re: Star's rapid change in mass? (Score:2)
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Well, the actual Nasa article talks about changes in mass, and stars pretty constantly eject material.
And this [uoregon.edu] says:
So, I'm more inclined to believe there is loss of actual mass going on.
It certainly sounds like changes in mass are part of the explanation for the mechanics of this. (Not that I c
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This. A typical main-sequence star (like our Sun), will eventually burn through (fuses) it's hydrogen, it then fuses the resulting helium and other elements and expands in a red-giant (for low and medium mass stars, high mass stars will form supergiants). Eventually the star will shed its outer layers (forming planetary nebula) and the core of the star made up of carbon and oxygen will collapse into a very dense white dwarf. White dwarves cannot sustain fusion, and as a result succumb to immense gravita
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When a star starts to run out of hydrogen in it's core fusion slows and the core contracts, and gets hotter. If it gets hot enough, it will start fusing helium, then carbon. The core ends up small, hot and producing a lot of energy. That energy causes the outer layers of hydrogen and helium to expand and the star becomes a red giant. Material from the outer layers eventually gets blown entirely off the star to form a nebula. That's where the mass goes.
I guess it's fairly rapid in the context of a star'
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We'll probably not see many of these (Score:1)
A) The star itself is smaller than a 'normal' star, making an occlusion more unlikely, and
B) Most inner planets are likely gone after the red giant phase, leaving only planets further away which are less likely to occlude the line of sight from Earth, and
C) Any configurations like this particular one are fleeting and on a cosmological timescale it is exceedingly unlikely we'll catch it at the right moment.
habitable zone? (Score:4, Insightful)
Nope.
White dwarfs are stars that have gone through an expansion to red giants & then shrink back down once they run out of low atomic level fuel like hydrogen & helium.
All planets close enough to be in a white dwarf's "habitable zone" would have been well inside the star during the star's red giant phase.
Unless someone comes up with a mechanism for the planets to escape from the red giant & then migrate even further inward to the white dwarf's now much smaller & closer "habitable zone", its extremely implausible.
Somebody please reassure me that this is once again a "journalist" attempting to talk of matters that far outstrip his comprehension & not an astrophysicist gone barking mad.
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Unless someone comes up with a mechanism for the planets to escape from the red giant & then migrate even further inward to the white dwarf's now much smaller & closer "habitable zone", its extremely implausible.
The mechanism is in the summary, along with the disclaimer that it's very unlikely but possible. I get not RTFA, but at least read to the end of the summary.
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The posited mechanism is implausible to the point of being ridiculous but then your post was probably typed by a bunch of monkeys so I suppose that implausible is no longer a problem...
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Nope.
White dwarfs are stars that have gone through an expansion to red giants & then shrink back down once they run out of low atomic level fuel like hydrogen & helium.
All planets close enough to be in a white dwarf's "habitable zone" would have been well inside the star during the star's red giant phase.
Unless someone comes up with a mechanism for the planets to escape from the red giant & then migrate even further inward to the white dwarf's now much smaller & closer "habitable zone", its extremely implausible.
Somebody please reassure me that this is once again a "journalist" attempting to talk of matters that far outstrip his comprehension & not an astrophysicist gone barking mad.
The red giant phase causes the start to swell up to massive sizes, albeit at insanely low density. This actually could have an aero-braking effect on planets further out, causing them to spiral inward, and they may survive this phase and end up close enough to be in the habitable zone BUT...
Because the luminosity of white dwarves is so much lower than main sequence stars, the habitable zone is much much closer than a main-sequence star. This causes two issues. One is that as the habitable zone get closer, i
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On the other hand, when you're subjecting planets to increased tidal forces, you're also unlocking a new source of energy: tidal flexure heating. You're bending a massive chunk of rock into a new shape, there's a tremendous amount of heat released in the process (you're probably also tidal locking it if it wasn't already).
Counterproductive if the body ends too close to the star, but useful if the body ends up too far from the star. Unless it's to the extremes covered in this article where the tidal forces
Re:habitable zone? (Score:4, Insightful)
Habitable zone == zone where surface temperatures would be such that liquid water could be found at the surface of the planet. Any significant dragging would also have the effect of heating all volatiles & stripping the planet's atmosphere. A waterless cinder with no atmosphere even at temperatures between 0 & 100C is not conducive to life as we now define it.
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No-one doubts that there are planets orbiting white dwarf stars & nobody cares that there are burnt-out cinders orbiting far off stars. It's the possibility of life being able to exist on the discovered planet "in the habitable zone" that would make it news.
Your BOTE calculations forgot to take into account the following points:
- No inner planet will survive being englobed by a red sun. Stellar density will be high enough to slow them down so that they impact the stellar core long before the red giant p
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All planets close enough to be in a white dwarf's "habitable zone" would have been well inside the star during the star's red giant phase.
Unless someone comes up with a mechanism for the planets to escape from the red giant & then migrate even further inward to the white dwarf's now much smaller & closer "habitable zone", its extremely implausible.
Why have you assumed that a planet must escape from the "habitable zone" before the red giant phase, and then migrate back in afterwards? There's no need for the planet to have been close to the star before the red giant phase. If a planet begins well away from the star, and only comes near it after it's become a white dwarf, you avoid half the problem: you need to explain it migrating inwards, but you don't need a mechanism for it to migrate outwards earlier.
An inward migration is the easier problem to s
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That there are mechanisms that make it possible for some animals to fly doesn't mean that pigs can fly. You're trying to perform a similar leap of logic.
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This was happening 570 years ago. Some kind of /. record?
You should see more discoveries like this (Score:2)
>> You should see more discoveries like this in the future
I'm sorry, I don't currently have access to the Kepler space observatory. Perhaps YOU'LL see...
The Dink (Score:2)
We don't call them "White Dwarf" any more. Now, they're known as "White Little People".
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Wha?
What's "gravitational pressure"? (Score:2)
the planet is disintegrating under the star's gravitational pressure
I'm guessing that's not the actual scientific term for whatever's happening to it. So what is? Is it a tidal forces thing?
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See the Roche limit, this term describes the boundary where you are at risk of disintegrating. A small moon around a gas giant would end up as big Saturnian rings.
Yes ocean tides would be a very tiny version, or Jupiter melting Io is more dramatic but not quite disintegrating.
If the moon came much closer I'm sure we'd have no danger of the Earth disintegrating but perhaps we would all be dead from earthquakes and tsunamis (or worse)
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Eclipses and transits are fairly common in the solar system. If you recall, a few years ago there was a somewhat rare transit of Venus across the sun. There was quite a bit of excitement about observing it because the information could be used to tune some of the models of exoplanet discovery.
The star isn't running out of time (Score:2)
Considering white dwarfs live an insanely long time, the star isn't "running out of time."
If a habitable planet was orbiting a white dwarf, life on that planet could potentially go on for billions and billions of years, barring any planet-killing catastrophes. The star would slowly cool, but life once formed might be able to adapt to the cooling temperatures over billions of years.
A red dwarf would be better, though. They're practically immortal and keep a steady output over their lifetime. Only problem
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If that's the case, then surface life would probably be difficult. I don't think radiation wouldn't be very harmful for life in an ocean, however.
And yeah, I'm not suggesting a habitable planet would stay habitable after being inside a red giant. However, if a planet became habitable after the red giant phase (imagine the amount of chaos going on after the star collapsed - planets would change position, possibly collide, lose their atmospheres, possibly gain new atmospheres and oceans from outgassing, etc