Ground and Space-Based Observations Unveil Future of Sun
Hello reader!
It
follows an article published in the day (05/23), in the website www.spacedaily.com,
noting that Ground and Space-Based Observations made by Brazilians astronomers unveal future of Sun.
Duda Falcão
SOLAR SCIENCE
Ground and Space-Based Observations
Unveil Future of Sun
by Staff Writers
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) May 23, 2013
(Credit: do Nascimento et al.) For a larger
version of
this image please go here.
A team of astronomers led by Jose Dias do Nascimento
(Department of Theoretical and Experimental Physics, Universidade Federal do
Rio Grande do Norte [DFTE, UFRN], Brazil) has found the farthest known solar
twin in the Milky Way Galaxy -- CoRoT Sol 1, which has about the same mass and
chemical composition as the Sun.
Spectra from the High Dispersion Spectrograph (HDS) on
the Subaru Telescope showed that CoRoT Sol 1 is about 6.7 billion years old
while space-based data from the CoRoT (Convection, Rotation and planetary
Transits) satellite indicated a rotation period of 29 +/- 5 days. This newly
discovered, evolved solar twin allows astronomers to uncover the near future of
our solar system's central star -- the Sun.
Since the Sun is the closest star to Earth, it has been
extensively studied in a variety of ways. Despite considerable efforts by
astronomers, we do not know yet how typical a star the Sun is. Except for the
youngest stars, the true rotation of those similar to the Sun is unknown, and
there are few studies of mature solar twins or of more evolved ones.
The mass (the amount of matter) and chemical composition
of a star are the main characteristics that determine its evolution. Studying
stars with the same mass and composition as the Sun, the so-called "solar
twins," can give us more information about our own Sun; solar twins of
various ages offer snapshots of the Sun's evolution at different phases (Figure
1).
The satellite CoRoT (Convection, Rotation and planetary
Transits) has provided precise space-based data from which it is possible to
determine the rotation periods of stars. The current team selected the best
solar twin candidates within a range of rotation periods to study the evolution
of the Sun's rotation period in detail. Because solar twins are faint, the team
initially used the High Dispersion Spectrograph (HDS) on the Subaru Telescope
to observe three of their solar twin candidates.
The large size of the Subaru Telescope and the capability
of HDS to precisely spread out the stellar light into many constituent colors
allowed them to study the stars' characteristics in detail. A meticulous
analysis of the data showed that one of the solar twin candidates was truly a
star with a mass and chemical composition similar to that of the Sun. The
finding was even more precious, because the star is at a more evolved stage and
can serve as an indicator of the future of the Sun.
Determining the age of a star is probably one of its most
difficult aspects to ascertain, but high quality spectra shed light on stellar
ages. CoRoT Sol 1 is about two billion years older than the Sun, but its
rotation period is about the same as the Sun's.
Subaru Telescope's HDS spectra of CoRoT Sol 1 show that
its overall chemical composition is similar to that of the Sun, but its
detailed abundance pattern shows some differences, like most nearby solar twins
(Figure 2). For example, the abundance of lithium (Li), an element that
decreases with age, is less than that of the Sun.
Team leader Dr. Jose Dias do Nascimento commented on the
significance of CoRoT Sol 1's age for understanding the Sun's future: "In
two billion years' time, about the solar twin's actual age, the Sun's radiation
may increase and make the Earth's surface so hot that liquid water can no
longer exist there in its natural state."
In contrast to other solar twins that are relatively
bright, CoRoT Sol 1, which is located in the constellation Unicorn (Monoceros),
is more than 200 times fainter than the brightest solar twin known.
The large 8.2 m mirror of the Subaru Telescope and the
precision of its high dispersion spectrograph made it possible to conduct this
detailed study of the spectra of such a faint star.
The team plans to use the Subaru Telescope to continue
its research on how typical a star the Sun is; they intend to describe its
rotation evolution by finding solar twins representing a broad range of stellar
ages and then placing the Sun within this context.
The members of the research team are J-D do Nascimento,
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte (UFRN), Brazil; Y. Takeda, National
Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ), Japan; J. Melendez, University of Sao
Paulo, Brazil; J.S. da Costa, UFRN, Brazil; G. F. Porto de Mello, Observatorio
do Valongo of the UFRJ, Brazil; and M. Castro, UFRN, Brazil.
The research paper entitled "The Future of the Sun: An Evolved Solar Twin Revealed
by CoRoT," on which this article is based, has been accepted
and will be published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters (ApJL).
Fonte: Site http://www.spacedaily.com
Comentário: Pois
é leitor, veja aí a importância da descoberta desse grupo de astrônomos
brasileiros que agora recebe através desse artigo o reconhecimento
internacional. Parabéns a todos eles.
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