Astronomy Picture of the Day
Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.
2015 January 11
Cataclysmic Dawn
Illustration Credit & Copyright: Mark A. Garlick (Space-art.co.uk)
Explanation: Will this dawn bring another nova? Such dilemmas might be pondered one day by
future humans living on a planet orbiting a
cataclysmic variable binary star system.
Cataclysmic variables involve gas falling from a large star onto an
accretion disk surrounding a massive but compact
white dwarf star. Explosive cataclysmic events such as a
dwarf nova can occur when a clump of gas in the interior of the
accretion disk heats up past a certain temperature. At that point, the clump will fall more quickly onto the
white dwarf and land with a bright flash. Such
dwarf novas will not destroy either star, and may occur irregularly on time scales from a few days to tens of years. Although a nova is much less energetic than a supernova, if
recurrent novas are not violent enough to expel more gas than is falling in, mass will accumulate onto the
white dwarf star until it passes its
Chandrasekhar limit. At that point, a
foreground cave may provide little protection, as the entire white dwarf star will explode in a
tremendous supernova.
Tomorrow's picture: crash planets
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