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Protoplanetary Disk found Encircling Mira B

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Protoplanetary Disk found Encircling Mira B Michael Ireland - Caltech Co-authors: John Monnier (U. Michigan), Peter Tuthill (U. Sydney), Richard Cohen (Keck Observatory) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Protoplanetary Disk found Encircling Mira B


1
Protoplanetary Disk found Encircling Mira B
  • Michael Ireland - Caltech
  • Co-authors John Monnier (U. Michigan), Peter
    Tuthill (U. Sydney), Richard Cohen (Keck
    Observatory)

2
Summary
  • Planets form in dusty protoplanetary disks
    around young stars.
  • What we found Evidence for a large dusty disk
    around the companion to Mira, a dying star.
  • This is a new type of protoplanetary disk a
    planetary system that can be reborn when its
    companion star dies.

3
Mira the Miracle Star
  • In the constellation Cetus, Mira was discovered
    as a variable star in 1596, demonstrating that
    the stars were not invariable as Aristotle had
    thought.
  • Visible to the naked eye for a month at a time,
    Mira periodically becomes 1000 times fainter,
    re-appearing in 11 months.
  • We now know that Mira is a star like the sun in
    its death throes, pulsating and ejecting its
    outer layers on its way to becoming an
    earth-sized white dwarf.

Mira
Credit AAVSO Website
4
Miras Companion, Mira B What we knew before
While Mira A was at its faintest, Mira B has been
detected in blue and ultraviolet light. So
astronomers have generally thought that Mira B
was only a hot, compact object (not the kind of
place youd form planets!).
Credit NASA/CXC/M.Weiss
5
The Keck Long-Wavelength-Spectrometer (LWS)
Segment-tilting Experiment
6
Programming the Mirror
One star is split into four images (blue image
falls off detector)
Richard Cohen (WMKO) wrote low-level ACS Software
7

Short-Exposure Images on Keck-LWS at 10.7 microns
10 arcseconds
10 arcseconds
8
Mira A and B A colorful conundrum.
Blue Hubble Space Telescope (actually blue),
Green Infrared 10 microns (silicate), Red
Infrared 12 microns
9
Solution A large side-illuminated disk around
Mira B
10
Protoplanetary disks usually located where stars
are born
Image credit NASA/HST
11
Mira B A born-again protoplanetary disk.
By comparing the measured size of the disk to
predictions, and by re-analysing Hubble Space
Telescope spectra, we can show that Mira B is an
ordinary star 0.5-0.7 times as massive as the sun.
Image credit NASA Origins
12
Mira B A once-off weird system, or something
common?
  • Two out of three stars systems are actually
    double-stars. One in four will end up like Mira A
    and B.
  • Today in our neighborhood, stars die 4 times
    more often than they are born.
  • If we turn our telescopes to overlooked nearby
    stars with white dwarf companions (like Mira A
    when it dies), we should be able to find many
    systems that formed like Mira B.
  • So We discovered that around Mira B is a new
    kind of protoplanetary disk, formed from the wind
    of a dying star. This is the first detection of
    this kind of disk.

13
Mira A and B Confirm with ISI and Gemini
14
Mira A and B Confirm with ISI and Gemini
Infrared Spatial Interferometer (Charlie Townes)
early 1990s measurement. Confirms that the
clump is moving against the wind - so must be
connected to Mira B.
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