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» » » » Secrets of the 'blue supergiant' revealed


Blue supergiants are the rock-and-roll stars of the universe. They are massive stars that live fast and die young which makes them rare and difficult to study, even with modern telescopes. Before space telescopes, few blue supergiants had been observed, so our knowledge of these stars was limited.

Secrets of the 'blue supergiant' revealed
Blue Supergiant - a snapshot of the interior of a star three times as heavy as our sun which
shows waves generated by turbulent core convection [Credit: Dr Tamara Rogers]
Leading astrophysicist Dr Tamara Rogers, from Newcastle University, UK, and her team have been working for the past five years to create simulations of stars like these to try to predict what it is that makes the surface appear the way it does.

Modelling the interior of stars, the team predicted that gravity waves, like those we see in the ocean, could break at the surface of stars. A second type of wave had also been predicted. These coherent waves are similar to the seismic waves on earth, which are generated from deep within the star.

Now, using data collected by the NASA space telescopes, an international team of experts led by KU Leuven in Belgium, have observed the star for the first time and discovered that almost all of these elusive blue giants do in fact shimmer and ripple in brightness due to the presence of waves on their surface.

As predicted, the waves originate in their deep interior and provide exciting new prospects for studying these stars using asteroseismology, a similar technique to how seismologists use earthquakes to study the Earth's interior. Publishing their findings in Nature Astronomy, the authors say that from observations of these waves, properties of the stars that are unobtainable from other astronomical techniques can now be studied.


Co-author Dr Rogers, based in the School of Mathematics, Statistics and Physics at Newcastle University, said: "When we first started our simulations and predicted these waves could break at the surface we didn't think it would ever be possible to observe them. Throughout the universe, stars come in different shapes, sizes and colours. Some stars are like our Sun and live calmly for billions of years."

"But massive stars live significantly shorter and more active lives before they explode in what is called a supernova and expel their material into space. In line with our predictions, these latest observations have confirmed two types of wave which give us different information about the star."

"Those which break at the surface, similar to the waves breaking on the beach, and the standing wave that just keeps on going and is similar to the seismic waves on earth. From these we can start to understand how the star is moving and rotating and the physics and chemistry of what is going on inside the deep interior, including the stellar core."

"Although we predicted these wave patterns, until now it was just that - a simulation of what might be going on. To actually see it and prove it is really quite an incredible moment for us."

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