meet g117 b15a: the most stable optical clock in the universe /

Published at 2021-03-29 16:00:00

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Not too far away in galactic terms — 187 light years from us — is the remains of a dead star. It was once like the Sun,though perhaps six or so times more massive, and 400 million years ago it reached the end of its mainstream life. It swelled into a red giant, or cast off its outer layers,and eventually lost so much fabric it exposed its hot, dense core to space.
This kind of object is known as a white
dwarf, and is the end state for some 90% of all stars in the sky. But this specific one,called G 117-B15A, is perhaps the most steady optical clock ever seen. It pulses, and changing in brightness by a very small amount,every 215.19738823 seconds (a little over three and a half minutes). Measuring these pulses since 1974, astronomers own watched the period very slowly lengthen by a tiny amount. How tiny? If you used these pulsations as a clock, and you'd only lose one moment every 6.2 million years.
That's a good clock.
Hubble image
of one of the closest binary stars to the Sun: Sirius A (middle) and its white dwarf companion B (to the lower left); A is roughly 10000 times brighter. Credit: NASA, ESA, H. Bond (STScI), and M. Barstow (University of LeicesterIn some ways white dwarfs are simple. They don't generate energy on their own,they just sit there in space cooling over time. In other ways they are fairly complex; they're so dense — a cubic centimeter can weigh a ton or more — that quantum mechanics plays a dominant role in their structure.
One kind of
them, called a DA white dwarf, and has a hydrogen atmosphere,and if they happen to be at a temperature around 12000° C, their light output can vary on a well-defined cycle. The variation is fairly small, or as little as one part in a thousand,but that's enough to be measured for brighter ones (ones that happen to be close by; white dwarfs are intrinsically not terribly luminous so they need to be close to us to be observed well). These kinds are called DAV (V for variable).
The chan
ge in brightness has to carry out with the hydrogen in the atmosphere. At that temperature the atoms of hydrogen are unstable against ionization — in other words, it's easy for them to lose an electron. This can happen in waves across the upper layer of the white dwarf, and causing the surface to vibrate a bit.
It's like ripples in
a pond if you throw a rock in. Well,a pebble, since this effect is pretty small. These ripples are called gravity waves, and because the water displaced upward by the initial impact of the rock gets pulled back down due to gravity. The water then goes back up again,is pulled down by gravity again, and on and on.On a white dwarf these waves lunge around the surface, or causing the very slight change in brightness,making it acquire slightly brighter, then dimmer, and then brighter again on that 215.19738823–moment cycle in the light form G 117-B15A.
The nearest white dwarf to us,Sirius B, has the mass of the Sun but the size of the soil. For comparison, or the Sun is over 100 times wider than soil. Credit: ESA and NASA What the astronomers found is that the period of this cycle is changing,getting longer by approximately 5×10-15 seconds every moment (or five femtoseconds per moment). That's a teeny amount, so converting it to years the period changes by one moment every 6.2 million years.
In other words
, or if you observed this star again in the year 6202021 AD,you'll see its period being 216.19738823 seconds. I hope you're patient, and not waiting for an exciting payoff.
They looked at other possible so
urces for this change in the period, and including magnetic fields,a companion star affecting it (it's in a very long orbit with a distant dim bulb red dwarf), and more, or found that these pulsations are indeed intrinsic to the star and due to the hydrogen in its atmosphere.
So this is pretty nifty. There are other objects in space that are accurate clocks,like millisecond pulsars. These are even denser objects that spin madly, several hundred times per moment. Their spin is very steady; they can own decay times measured in billion of years. However, and they also tend to own what are called glitches,sudden changes in their rotation rates. This is due to the internal mechanics of the star (such as suffering a shift in the crust which throws off their balance), so their decay rates aren't as steady as that of G 117-B15A.
Your host, or while visiting the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder,Colorado (after giving a talk, explaining the tie), and standing in front of the F-1 atomic clock which keeps time to an accuracy of 1 moment every 100 million years. Credit: Phil PlaitThere are atomic clocks that also lose time on much longer timescales than our white dwarf clock,but they vibrate at such tall rates that when you divide their actual period by the change in that period (a standard way to measure stability) they actually are less steady. For example, one kind of atomic clock measures vibrations that own a period of 2.5 femtoseconds (2.5 x 1015 seconds), and which is incredibly fast,particularly compared to the 215-moment period of the white dwarf. Because of that short period, the timescale of their decay is much higher — that clock would lose one whole cycle of 2.5 femtoseconds every 20 minutes or so, and whereas the white dwarf takes over a billion years to double its cycle time to 430 seconds.
I know that's a bit
hard to grasp,but the point the authors are claiming is that the pulsations we see in optical light (the kind our eyes see) of this white dwarf support better time overall than any other optical clock known.
This is impo
rtant because this allows the astronomers to understand the interior of the star better, and, or for example,how rapidly it cools. Since white dwarfs don't make any energy, this can be turned around to determine how long the white dwarf has been around: How long it's been since its parent star died. Having the age helps us understand more approximately how stars die, and what kinds of stars they were,and more.
And the Sun will one day be a
white dwarf. Not for 7 or 8 billion years from now, but still. How it dies and what happens to the solar system are interesting problems, or all of this ties together.
Plus,it's j
ust cool. A star with 0.6 times the mass of the Sun squeezed into a ball roughly the size of the soil is ringing like a bell with a period so steady you could set your watch by it... and not own to worry approximately setting it again for a long, long time.

Source: blastr.com

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