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Giant Cycones at Saturn's Poles Create a Swirl of Mystery 10/15/2008

New images yield clues to seasons of Uranus 10/15/2008

NASA Supercomputer Shows How Dust Rings Point to Exo-Earths 10/14/2008

Astronomers get best view yet of infant stars at feeding time 10/13/2008

Phoenix Lander Digs And Analyzes Soil As Darkness Gathers 10/13/2008

Venus Express searching for life - on Earth 10/12/2008

South Pole Telescope team uses new method to discover clusters of galaxies far, far away 10/12/2008

Cosmic eye sheds light on early galaxy formation 10/11/2008

Stars stop forming when big galaxies collide 10/11/2008

CoRoT discovery challenges the definition of extra-solar planets 10/10/2008

Born from the Wind - Unique Multi-wavelength Portrait of Star Birth 10/9/2008

NASA spacecraft ready to explore outer solar system 10/8/2008

Cassini flyby of Saturn moon offers insight into solar system history 10/8/2008

Researchers and students to develop small CubeSat satellites 10/7/2008

Meteorites From Inner Solar System Match Up To Earth's Platinum Standard 10/7/2008

The Behemoth Has a Thick Belt (5/30/2008)

Tags:
stars, galaxies, red supergiants, large magellanic cloud

A Thick Belt around a Massive Star in Another Galaxy - Credit: ESO
A Thick Belt around a Massive Star in Another Galaxy - Credit: ESO
Astronomers resolve torus around star in another galaxy

Talk about a diet! By resolving, for the first time, features of an individual star in a neighbouring galaxy, ESO's VLT has allowed astronomers to determine that it weighs almost half of what was previously thought, thereby solving the mystery of its existence. The behemoth star is found to be surrounded by a massive and thick torus of gas and dust, and is most likely experiencing unstable, violent mass loss.

WOH G64 is a red supergiant star almost 2 000 times as large as our Sun and is located 163 000 light-years away in the Large Magellanic Cloud, one of the Milky Way's satellite galaxies.

"Previous estimates gave an initial mass of 40 times the mass of the Sun to WOH G64. But this was a real problem as it was way too cold, compared to what theoretical models predict for such a massive star. Its existence couldn't be explained," says Keiichi Ohnaka, who led the work on this object.

New observations, made with ESO's Very Large Telescope Interferometer, conclude that the gas and dust around the star is arranged in a thick ring, rather than a spherical shell, and the star is thus less hidden than had been assumed. This implies that the object is in fact half as luminous as previously thought, and thus, less massive. The astronomers infer that the star started its life with a mass of 25 solar masses. For such a star, the observed temperature is closer to what one would expect.

"Still, the characteristics of the star mean that it may be experiencing a very unstable phase accompanied by heavy mass loss," says co-author Markus Wittkowski from ESO. "We estimate that the belt of gas and dust that surrounds it contains between 3 and 9 solar masses, which means that the star has already lost between one tenth and a third of its initial mass."

To reach this conclusion, the team of astronomers used the MIDI instrument to combine the light collected by three pairs of 8.2-m Unit Telescopes of the VLT. This is the first time that MIDI has been used to study an individual star outside our Galaxy.

The observations allowed the astronomers to clearly resolve the star. Comparisons with models led them to conclude that the star is surrounded by a gigantic, thick torus, expanding from about 15 stellar radii (or 120 times the distance between the Earth and the Sun - 120 AU!) to more than 250 stellar radii (or 30 000 AU!).

"Everything is huge about this system. The star itself is so big that it would fill almost all the space between the Sun and the orbit of Saturn," says Ohnaka. "And the torus that surrounds it is perhaps a light-year across! Still, because it is so far away, only the power of interferometry with the VLT could give us a glimpse on this object. "

Notes

The name WOH G64, refers to the fact that it is the 64th entry in the catalogue by Westerlund, Olander, and Hedin, published in 1981, and based on observations made at ESO La Silla.

The team is comprised of K. Ohnaka, T. Driebe, K.-H. Hofmann, G. Weigelt (Max-Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy, Bonn, Germany), and M. Wittkowski (ESO).

"Spatially resolved dusty torus toward the red supergiant WHO G64 in the Large Magellanic Cloud", by K. Ohnaka et al., Astronomy and Astrophysics, 484, 371.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere

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