ESO: A Jumble of Exotic Stars (47 Tuc)

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Expand view Topic review: ESO: A Jumble of Exotic Stars (47 Tuc)

Re: ESO: A Jumble of Exotic Stars (47 Tuc)

by Ann » Fri Jan 11, 2013 2:05 am

Studying this cluster in infrared light is a good idea. Normally when you photograph things in infrared light you miss the blue objects, but in the case of 47 Tuc there aren't many blue objects there to miss. Unlike most other globular clusters, 47 Tuc lacks the relatively bright blue stars called blue horizontal branch stars. Note the short red horizontal branch of 47 Tuc in this diagram. 47 Tuc does have blue stragglers, but they are both less blue and less bright than blue horizontal branch stars.

The reason why 47 lacks the blue horizontal branch stars is that this globular is more metal-rich than is typical for other globular clusters such as, say, M13. Note the horizontal branch (HB), extending rather far to the left (blue) part, in this diagram of globular cluster M3.

Ann

ESO: A Jumble of Exotic Stars (47 Tuc)

by bystander » Thu Jan 10, 2013 10:41 pm

A Jumble of Exotic Stars
European Southern Observatory | VISTA | 2013 Jan 10

New VISTA snap of star cluster 47 Tucanae
Image
Credit: ESO/M.-R. Cioni/VISTA Magellanic Cloud survey.
Acknowledgment: Cambridge Astronomical Survey Unit

This new infrared image from ESO’s VISTA telescope shows the globular cluster 47 Tucanae in striking detail. This cluster contains millions of stars, and there are many nestled at its core that are exotic and display unusual properties. Studying objects within clusters like 47 Tucanae may help us to understand how these oddballs form and interact. This image is very sharp and deep due to the size, sensitivity, and location of VISTA, which is sited at ESO's Paranal Observatory in Chile.

Globular clusters are vast, spherical clouds of old stars bound together by gravity. They are found circling the cores of galaxies, as satellites orbit the Earth. These star clumps contain very little dust and gas — it is thought that most of it has been either blown from the cluster by winds and explosions from the stars within, or stripped away by interstellar gas interacting with the cluster. Any remaining material coalesced to form stars billions of years ago.

These globular clusters spark a considerable amount of interest for astronomers — 47 Tucanae, otherwise known as NGC 104, is a huge, ancient globular cluster about 15 000 light-years away from us, and is known to contain many bizarre and interesting stars and systems.

Located in the southern constellation of Tucana (The Toucan), 47 Tucanae orbits our Milky Way. At about 120 light-years across it is so large that, despite its distance, it looks about as big as the full Moon. Hosting millions of stars, it is one of the brightest and most massive globular clusters known and is visible to the naked eye [1]. In amongst the swirling mass of stars at its heart lie many intriguing systems, including X-ray sources, variable stars, vampire stars, unexpectedly bright “normal” stars known as blue stragglers (eso1243), and tiny objects known as millisecond pulsars, small dead stars that rotate astonishingly quickly [2].

Red giants, stars that have exhausted the fuel in their cores and swollen in size, are scattered across this VISTA image and are easy to pick out, glowing a deep amber against the bright white-yellow background stars. The densely packed core is contrasted against the more sparse outer regions of the cluster, and in the background huge numbers of stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud are visible.

This image was taken using ESO’s VISTA (Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy) as part of the VMC survey of the region of the Magellanic Clouds, two of the closest known galaxies to us. 47 Tucanae, although much closer than the Clouds, by chance lies in the the foreground of the Small Magellanic Cloud (eso1008), and was snapped during the survey.

VISTA is the world’s largest telescope dedicated to mapping the sky. Located at ESO’s Paranal Observatory in Chile, this infrared telescope, with its large mirror, wide field of view and sensitive detectors, is revealing a new view of the southern sky. Using a combination of sharp infrared images — such as the VISTA image above — and visible-light observations allows astronomers to probe the contents and history of objects like 47 Tucanae in great detail.
  1. Notes:

    [*] There are over 150 globular clusters orbiting our galaxy. 47 Tucanae is the second most massive after Omega Centauri (eso0844).

    [*] Millisecond pulsars are incredibly quickly rotating versions of regular pulsars, highly magnetised, rotating stellar remnants that emit bursts of radiation as they spin. There are 23 known millisecond pulsars in 47 Tucanae — more than in all other globular clusters bar one, Terzan 5 (eso0945).

A Stunning, Sparkling Beehive Caught by Accident
Slate Blogs | Bad Astronomy | 2013 Jan 11

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