Theres another oddly flickering star in the galaxy.
Astronomers using a telescope in Chile have discovered a star whose strange dimming and brightening of light are reminiscent of Tabbys star, which was once suggested to host an alien megastructure.
The megastructure idea, first posited in 2015, was later quashed by data suggesting that the dips are probably from dust particles obscuring the stars light (SN Online: 1/3/18). The new stars behavior is probably not due to aliens, either. But it is baffling, says astronomer Roberto Saito of the Federal University of Santa Catarina in Florianópolis, Brazil. He and his colleagues reported the stars flickering November 6 on arXiv.org.
“We dont know what the object is,” he says. “And thats interesting.” The star could have some sort of orbiting debris that periodically blocks the starlight, but Saito and colleagues say they need more observations to figure out if thats possible or if the flicker is caused by something else.
The researchers had been searching for supernovas, stars that suddenly brighten as they explode, when the team spotted the object in data taken with the VISTA telescope in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. The data were part of a larger survey of the galaxys center called the VISTA Variables in the Vía Láctea, or VVV.
Instead of brightening, this star suddenly dimmed. The team called it VVV-WIT-07, for “What is this?”
From 2010 to 2018, the stars brightness waxed and waned with no set pattern. That lack of pattern is similar to Tabbys star, except VVV-WIT-07s light dropped by up to 80 percent, while Tabbys star dimmed by only about 20 percent.
Theres another flickering star, J1407, that might be a closer match. That star periodically dims by up to 95 percent, astronomer Eric Mamajek of the University of Rochester in New York and colleagues reported in 2012. Astronomers think J1407 hosts an orbiting planet with an enormous ring system that periodically eclipses the star (SN: 3/7/15, p. 5).
Finding multiple stars that all dim sporadically could mean that the sources of such flickering, whatever they are, must be relatively routine, says astronomer Tabetha Boyajian of Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, who is also Tabbys stars namesake.
“If this phenomenon is the same as whats happening with Tabbys star, then we cant invoke an elaborate explanation for whats happening in both systems,” Boyajian says. “If youre starting to see stars similar to this all over the place, then its got to be a really common thing that happens in nature. Thats really cool.”
But shes not yet convinced that the stars are similar.
Because VVV-WIT-07 is located in the plane of the galaxy, the view from Earth to the star is full of dust, making it hard to make out details such as the stars distance and even what kind of star it is. If its a young variable star, for instance, then its light dips might be internal. Then astronomers wouldnt need to invoke orbiting rings or other strange things.
“Pretty much everythings on the table for it right now,” Boyajian says. “We need more data.”
Saito and his colleagues hope to follow up on the star with bigger telescopes, like the 8.1-meter Gemini telescope or the Atacama Large Millimeter Array, both in Chile.
[contf]
[contfnew]
science news
[contfnewc]
[contfnewc]