Space Watch

Two stars colliding in 2083 will outshine all the others in the Sky

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A pair of stars doing a cosmic dance are getting ready to explode. The two stars make up a binary called V Sagittae in the constellation Sagitta, and they have brightened 10-fold over the course of the last century. In this century, they are due to brighten so much that the explosion will be visible with the naked eye.

V Sagittae is made up of a white dwarf, which is the burned-out corpse of a star, and another star about four times as massive. As the two circle around one another, plasma is pulled from the star onto the white dwarf and they get closer together. Bradley Schaefer at Louisiana State University and his colleagues examined photos of the pair of stars from 1890 to the present and found that they have been getting exponentially brighter since then.

When they modelled this brightening, they found that the two stars must be rapidly getting closer together, spinning faster and faster around one another. They calculated that the stars of V Sagittae will smash together in about the year 2083, producing an enormous explosion. Schaeffer presented this work at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Hawaii on 6 January.

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