Factor 1,000,000 sun block, Mira Variables

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    Public Affairs
    Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

    For more information, contact:

    David A. Aguilar, Public Affairs
    Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
    Phone: 617-495-7462 Fax: 617-495-7468
    daguilar@cfa.harvard.edu

    For Release: March 7, 2002

    Release No.: 02-07

    Even Stars Use Sunscreen!

    Cambridge, MA -- Five billion years from now, a visitor to our solar
    system may see a spectacular sight -- our sun swollen into a giant
    red orb that has swallowed the inner planets, including Earth. At that
    size, the sun will shine with terrible ferocity. But over the course
    of a year, it will expand even further, dimming to 1/1000th its
    previous strength and fading to near-invisibility before shrinking
    and brightening again. The sun will have joined the ranks of the Mira
    variable stars, named after the red giant star Mira (omicron Ceti) in
    the constellation Cetus the Whale.

    The German astronomer David Fabricius discovered the ever-changing
    nature of omicron Ceti in 1596 while searching for Mercury. In 1642,
    the star was dubbed Mira, which means "The Wonderful."

    While astronomers have known of the existence of these dramatically
    changing stars for hundreds of years, the cause of their variability
    has been hard to identify. Now, two researchers at the Harvard-
    Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics have solved this long-standing
    mystery. The key, say Mark Reid and Joshua Goldston, is the formation
    of light-absorbing chemicals in the star's gaseous atmosphere -- the
    same chemicals found in sunscreen.

    "Long before there were professional astronomers, people looked at the
    heavens and noted that some stars seemed to vanish and then reappear,"
    says Reid. "Only now are we beginning to understand more fully why
    that happens."

    Their results will appear in the April 1, 2002 issue of the
    Astrophysical Journal.

    "Many variable stars change their brightness by small amounts because
    they pulsate like a beating heart, alternately growing smaller and
    hotter, then larger and cooler," remarks Goldston. "But such
    pulsations can only explain brightness changes up to a factor of
    50, which is like going from a 150-watt light bulb to a 3-watt
    night-light." Pulsations alone cannot cause the dramatic change seen
    in Mira variables.

    In 1933, Edison Pettit & Seth Nicholson suggested that molecules of
    metallic oxides might form in a variable star's atmosphere as it
    expanded and cooled. Those molecules would then absorb light from
    the star, causing it to dim. However, in 1933 they lacked the
    computing power to model the star to see if this really worked.

    Reid and Goldston realized that the formation of molecules like
    titanium oxide (the white coloring agent used in many sunscreens and
    paints) would increase the opacity of the star's atmosphere. As a
    result, light from inner, hotter regions is absorbed. Only light
    coming from the outer, cooler layers of the star can reach us.

    "These outer layers are so cool that most of the light is emitted
    as heat at infrared wavelengths. There is so little optical light
    emitted that a Mira variable seems to almost 'disappear' to the
    human eye," says Reid. "It's amazing to realize what happens when
    a star naturally forms sunscreen in its atmosphere. That is what
    Mira variables do, and it has a powerful effect on how much light
    we see with our eyes."

    The implications for a star that naturally forms sunscreen in its
    atmosphere are dramatic. The apparent optical surface of the already
    giant star expands even further, to nearly four times the Earth-Sun
    distance. The temperature of the light-emitting material at that
    distance is quite low, resulting in a thousand-fold dimming of the
    star at visible wavelengths. "That dimming is like exchanging a
    bank of stadium lights for a single night-light," says Reid.

    At slightly greater distances, the temperature drops even lower,
    which allows the formation of silicate or graphite dust. Indeed,
    shells of dust have been directly observed around some Mira
    variables. That dust can block additional light and dim the star
    even more. The dust is eventually dispersed into interstellar space,
    where it contributes vital heavy elements to future generations of
    stars (and potentially to future planetary systems where life may
    form).

    Reid says, "The study of Mira variables is an exciting example of
    how studying distant stars can tell us about our own sun's future.
    Dermatologists warn us that we need to use sunscreen to protect
    our skin from our nearest star, the Sun. Little did we ever expect
    other stars to be using it, too!"

    Headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the Harvard-Smithsonian
    Center for Astrophysics (CfA) is a joint collaboration between the
    Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and the Harvard College
    Observatory. CfA scientists organized into seven research divisions
    study the origin, evolution, and ultimate fate of the universe.

    Note to Editors: High-resolution images are available online at
    http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/press/reid_images.html
     

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