Los Angeles Times

Nearly 600 years later, mystery solved

Researcher­s find the source of a ‘guest star’ first documented nearly 600 years ago.

- AMINA KHAN amina.khan@latimes.com Twitter: @aminawrite

Researcher­s find the source of a “guest star” documented by Korean astronomer­s in 1437.

A team of researcher­s has discovered the source of a stellar explosion that was first documented by Korean astronomer­s nearly 600 years ago.

The pinpointin­g of the binary star system that birthed Nova Scorpii 1437, described in the journal Nature, solves a centuriesl­ong mystery and sheds new light on the nature of stars whose surfaces explode.

One night in the year 1437, astronomer­s in Seoul noticed a new star that had appeared out of nowhere, sitting in the tail of the constellat­ion Scorpius. It lasted for 14 days before fading away. The observers who documented it in the Sejong Sillok — the Veritable Records of King Sejong, who ruled Korea from 1418 to 1464 — called it a “guest star.”

This was not a new star, but a nova — an explosion caused by superheate­d material gathering around a white dwarf. A white dwarf is a stellar corpse — the remnant of a dying star that has already sloughed off its outer layers, leaving behind a small, dense core. But when a white dwarf is in a binary system with a normal star, that stellar corpse becomes a stellar zombie, gobbling up material pulled from its normal companion. That stolen star-stuff gets sucked into an accretion disk around the white dwarf, and eventually ends up on its surface.

As that additional mass builds up, the rising pressure and temperatur­e trigger a runaway nuclear reaction. The resulting thermonucl­ear explosion hurls off all that extra star-stuff from the white dwarf ’s surface, creating a nova that can, briefly, be up to a million times brighter than usual.

White dwarfs can handle only so much mass — up to the Chandrasek­har Limit, about 1.4 suns’ worth — beyond which they would collapse. But this process acts a little like a safety valve, allowing the white dwarf to hurl off that stolen star stuff and start siphoning more away from its binary companion again.

These particular binary star systems, also known as cataclysmi­c variables, can do this over and over, for a very long time — or so researcher­s think. But astronomer­s haven’t been around long enough to see this cycle in action, said lead author Michael Shara, a curator in the American Museum of Natural History’s department of astrophysi­cs.

“In 100,000 years, we’ll certainly have had the opportunit­y to check on all of the dwarf novas that we know of in the sky, watch them go into nova eruptions, and hopefully watch them fade back into dwarf novae,” Shara said. “But I don’t have that kind of time.”

That’s why the historical record of such events, like the one documented by Koreans nearly six centuries ago, can be so useful to researcher­s like Shara.

The problem is, it’s very difficult to match up the historical record to the stars we see today. That’s because the white dwarf and its companion star would have moved away from the nova’s center in the meantime.

Scouring the Scorpio system, Shara and his colleagues identified a shelllike structure (a possible nova remnant) as well as a star system that was no longer dead center but could potentiall­y have been the source. He and his colleagues then dug into more recent archives — photograph­ic plates from 1923 taken by the Harvard Observator­y station in Peru, now available online.

By tracking how much the binary star system had moved over the last century, the researcher­s could then figure out how far it must have moved over the last 600 years. That system’s position turned out to match the Korean astronomer­s’ descriptio­n.

“Astronomy is concerned with both the large scale and the long term, and historical observatio­ns are often important for resolving evolutiona­ry questions,” Steven Shore of the University of Pisa, who was not involved in the research, wrote in a commentary. “In this case, Shara and colleagues’ identifica­tion of the cataclysmi­c variable associated with Nova Scorpii 1437 is a lovely piece of historical scholarshi­p.”

Other photograph­ic plates from the 1940s showed that the white dwarf binary system had behaved like a dwarf nova in the 1930s and ’40s, Shore said. Astronomer­s had puzzled over dwarf novae, wondering how they were related to classical novae. The new study shows that dwarf novae and full novae are one and the same — just at different stages in their cycle.

It also shows that these white dwarfs can start building up mass at a good clip pretty soon after going nova, Shore added.

“How novae affect the long-term developmen­t of cataclysmi­c variables and how much of the accreted gas is expelled by the explosion can be understood only by discoverin­g systems that are in temporary retirement,” Shore wrote. “Shara and colleagues’ study provides the key to finding these systems in our galaxy.”

 ?? K. Ilkiewicz and J. Mikolajew ?? NOVA SCORPII 1437 as seen from a telescope in Chile. In 1437, astronomer­s in Korea noticed that the star had appeared out of nowhere in the tail of the constellat­ion Scorpius. It lasted for 14 days before fading away.
K. Ilkiewicz and J. Mikolajew NOVA SCORPII 1437 as seen from a telescope in Chile. In 1437, astronomer­s in Korea noticed that the star had appeared out of nowhere in the tail of the constellat­ion Scorpius. It lasted for 14 days before fading away.

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