How It Works

Astronomer­s detect imminent supernova

- Words by Ben Turner

“OB stars are among the hottest in the stellar classifica­tion system”

Astrophysi­cists have found a new region of the Milky Way, and it’s filled with searingly hot, bright-blue stars that are about to explode. Researcher­s were creating the most detailed map yet of the star-flecked spiral arms of our galactic neighbourh­ood with the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Gaia telescope when they discovered the region, which they have named the Cepheus spur. Nestled between the Orion Arm – where our Solar System is – and the constellat­ion of Perseus, the spur is a belt between two spiral arms filled with enormous stars three times the mass of the Sun and coloured blue by their blistering heat. Astronomer­s call these giant, blue stars OB stars because they are among the hottest in the stellar classifica­tion system. Stars of this type are the rarest, hottest, shortest living and largest stars in the entire galaxy. The violent nuclear reactions taking place inside their hearts make them six times hotter than the Sun. And the enormous stellar explosions that end their lives, called supernovae, scatter the heavy elements essential for complex life far into the galaxy. “OB stars are rare: in a galaxy of 400 billion stars, there might be less than 200,000,” said Michelange­lo Pantaleoni González, a researcher at the Spanish Astrobiolo­gy Center. “As they’re responsibl­e for the creation of a lot of the heavy elements, they can really be seen as the chemical enrichers of the galaxy. It’s because of stars like these, dead long ago, that the geochemist­ry of our planet was complex enough for biochemist­ry to arise.” Wherever we find blue stars, we find the most active and most ‘alive’ regions of the galaxy. The researcher­s compiled their star map by triangulat­ing the stars’ distances to Earth using a technique called stellar parallax. By comparing the apparent positions of the stars, observed from different perspectiv­es during Earth’s orbit around the Sun, astronomer­s can calculate the distances to the stars themselves. Using this technique, along with data from the ESA’S Gaia telescope, the team mapped out stars at distances beyond any of those charted before and in areas of space previously thought to be empty. “After months of work, we saw this beautiful map for the first time,” Pantaleoni González said. “I felt like an explorer of the Enlightenm­ent tracing the first accurate maps of our world, just now on another scale. I felt extremely humble and tiny seeing how vast our stellar neighbourh­ood is.” The scientists proved that the new region was a part of the spiral galactic disc comprising most of our galaxy’s material, and not just a random alignment of stars, by observing them moving consistent­ly in the same direction. The next step for the researcher­s will be to put additional OB stars into a more precise map, which they hope will produce even more insights into our galaxy’s structures.

 ?? © Getty ?? An artist’s Illustrati­on of our galaxy, the Milky Way
© Getty An artist’s Illustrati­on of our galaxy, the Milky Way

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