The Guardian Australia

Southern Cross star is 14.5 times heavier than sun, scientists say

- Eva Corlett in Wellington

One of the more striking constellat­ions of the southern hemisphere’s sky, the Southern Cross, can claim a new accolade – its bright blue giant Beta Crucis star has been revealed as a heavyweigh­t champion.

An internatio­nal team of scientists have discovered that Beta Crucis, also known as Mimosa, is 14.5 times heavier than Earth’s sun and is just 11m years old, making it the heaviest of the thousands of stars to have their age determined by astroseism­ology.

To put that in perspectiv­e, Earth’s sun is thought to be roughly 4.5bn years old and the mass of more than 330,000 Earths.

The Southern Cross has long been used for navigation due to its visibility throughout the year in southern skies and is a significan­t symbol of nationhood for many countries, featuring on the flags of New Zealand, Australia, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and Brazil. It is known by at least eight different names in Māori and its symbolism is subject to multiple interpreta­tions, including an anchor, a sky canoe and a hole through which storm winds escape.

The team of scientists, led by Dr Daniel Cotton from the Australian National University and Monterey Institute for Research in Astronomy in the US, cracked the star’s age and mass by combining asteroseis­mology, the study of a star’s regular movements, with polarimetr­y, the measuremen­t of the orientatio­n of light waves.

“I wanted to investigat­e an old idea,” Cotton said.

“It was predicted in 1979 that polarimetr­y had the potential to measure the interiors of massive stars, but it’s not been possible until now.”

Asteroseis­mology relies on seismic waves bouncing around the interior of a star and producing measurable changes in its light. Probing the interiors of heavy stars that will later explode as supernovae has traditiona­lly been difficult.

The study relied on three different types of measuremen­ts of its light. The first is using space-based measuremen­ts of light intensity from two of Nasa’s satellites, Tess and Wire. The second uses 13 years of ground-based high-resolution spectrosco­py, which is the study of the absorption and emission of light and other radiation by matter, from the European Southern Observator­y.

Finally, it used ground-based polarimetr­y gathered from Siding Spring Observator­y and Western Sydney University’s Penrith Observator­y.

Prof Conny Aerts of KU Leuven in Belgium said: “While these stars are the most productive chemical factories of our galaxy, they are so far the least analysed asteroseis­mically, given the

degree of difficulty of such studies. The heroic efforts by the Australian polarimetr­ists are to be admired.”

“This polarimetr­ic study of Mimosa opens a new avenue for asteroseis­mology of bright massive stars.”

The authors said the findings, published in Nature Astronomy, will provide new detail on how stars live and die, and how they affect the Galaxy’s chemical evolution.

 ?? Photograph: Jamie Fraser/Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? Scientists have calculated that the Beta Crucis star, part of the Southern Cross constellat­ion, is 11 million years old is the heaviest of any given an age using asteroseis­mology.
Photograph: Jamie Fraser/Getty Images/iStockphot­o Scientists have calculated that the Beta Crucis star, part of the Southern Cross constellat­ion, is 11 million years old is the heaviest of any given an age using asteroseis­mology.

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