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"Young Suns" by: Deepak Karamcheti (Research/Penn State, Vol. 18,
no. 1 (January, 1997))
Children look up at the night
sky, at the twinkling stars and occasional colorful bursts of
planets, and wonder where they come from, what they were made of,
and how far away they really are.
Astronomers do too.
Every day scientists across the
globe stare endlessly at the printouts from huge telescopes or
from satellites deep in the uncharted regions of the galaxy,
searching for the slightest clue. Among them is Lee Carkner, a
doctoral candidate in astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State,
who, along with his adviser Eric Feigelson, is studying stars
that closely resemble our own Sun.
Stars are spawned by large clouds
of gas and dust which eventually collapse, entering into the
primary stage of stardom, the protostar phase. Protostars differ
from stars like the Sun in that they do not burn hydrogen by
nuclear fusion, but rather garner their energy from gravitational
collapse. Some of the material does not fall directly into the
protostar, but orbits it, creating a disk: The star now enters
the T Tauri (pronounced TEE-tor-ee) phase. T Tauri stars are
strong x-ray emitters, although most of their surface is only a
few thousand degrees warm. (X-rays are normally associated with
temperatures of several million degrees.)
"What we've figured
out," Carkner says, "is that these x-rays are being
emitted by a process very similar to that in the Sun."
Floating above the yellow surface of the Sun are large coronal
regions, thousands of times hotter than the surface itself.
"These regions are heated," Carkner explains, "by
the crackling of large magnetic loops rooted in the surface,
heating the plasma so that it produces x-rays."
Because x-rays are blocked by the
Earth's atmosphere, a ground-based telescope does not suffice to
study T Tauri stars. Therefore, Carkner enlisted the help of the
orbital satellite ROSAT, or Roentgensatellit (named after
Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, the man who discovered x-rays). ROSAT
has long cylindrical mirrors wrapped in gold foil. X-rays enter
these cylinders, are reflected along the mirrors, and interact
with a box of gas (called a proportional counter), which detects
the x-rays. Through a tedious process that involves taking a
snapshot of a large region of the sky and searching for an x-ray
emitter, Carkner is hoping to discover T Tauri stars that might
have gone undetected by other methods. "You find a good
x-ray emitter," Carkner says, "and that's a good
candidate for a T Tauri star."
There are two types of T Tauri
stars, classical and weak, he explains. The classical T Tauri is
characterized by a large disk of dust and gas orbiting the young
star. "Eventually," Carkner notes, "we think these
disks will conglomerate into planets and planetary systems."
Weak T Tauri stars lack any visible disk, though Carkner believes
there was once one around every star. "These disks are
ubiquitous," Carkner adds. "T Tauri stars have them,
protostars have them. Something's got to happen to them."
All stars pass through the
protostar and T Tauri stages, as our Sun once did. "There
are no Peter Pan T Tauri stars," Carkner jokes. "They
always grow up." But the Sun is midway through its 10
billion year life; the stars Carkner is looking at are a spry 10
million years young. Studying them, he believes, will lead to a
better understanding of the time frame involved in the
dissipation of the disk and the formation of planetary systems
like our own.
Since any planetary system needs
a sun (a former T Tauri) in order to support life, Carkner's
study will also narrow down the possibilities of where other life
could exist. Although it may not lead to the discovery of
habitable solar systems and planets, Carkner says, "I think
we'll be able to say with a lot more confidence that X
number of stars have planetary systems. We'll have a more secure
base to speculate how many civilizations might be out
there."
Lee Carkner is a doctoral
student in astronomy and astrophysics. His adviser is Eric
Feigelson, Ph.D., professor of astronomy and astrophysics in the
Eberly College of Science, 518 Davey Lab, University Park, PA
16802; 814-865-0162. This project is funded by NASA.
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