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Copenhagen, Denmark (SPX) Apr 09, 2007 It has been a mystery for astronomers how certain dying stars have their colossal quantities of material blown out into the universe and shrink into objects called "white dwarves". This is the basis of a ground-breaking new theory by astrophysicists Anja C. Andersen from the Dark Cosmology Centre at the University of Copenhagen and Susanne Hofner of the University of Uppsala. Earth and the other planets in our solar system are built up of elements which have been produced in earlier generations of stars. Deep in the stars' very hot core, the elements are created out of hydrogen, and when the stars explode and die, the elements are shot out into the universe as huge clouds of gas and dust. Gradually, all that dust aggregates, eventually forming new stars and planets.
Pitch-black dust clouds
Transparent dust clouds
Theory discarded Next they thought that perhaps many molecules had been produced, which could block out the light and thereby create a wind which blew the star's outermost layer into space. But the model calculations showed that the molecules could not block enough light to drive the process alone. When the star becomes a red giant it pulses in it's death-throes, and perhaps this could "spark" the process into motion and force the star's material out. But this theory didn't tally with real observations of these stars.
A New Carbon Theory "It is so wonderful, that it can be so simple, and the theory fits with all our subsequent model calculations", says Anja C. Andersen. The theory also fits with the observations one has from dying red giants. The carbon may be the explanation for how both types of star blow their material into space, where they are ultimately reused in the cosmic cycle in new stars and planets. Related Links University of Copenhagen Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It
![]() ![]() Astronomers think that there are enormous black holes at the centers of most, if not all, galaxies. These black holes, which can be millions or even billions of times more massive than the Sun, can greatly affect the galaxy and the environments around them. One way such black holes shape their surroundings is by generating powerful jets of high-energy particles. |
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