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Download Sakurai`s Object - Department of Physics, HKU
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Sakurai’s Object A Case Of Superfast Stellar Evolution Dr H F Chau Department of Physics HKU • On 20th Feb 1996, amateur comet hunter Yukio Sakurai (櫻井幸雄) discovered a magnitude 12 variable star V4334 SGR. • Position of the star is (17h52m32.69s,-17o41’07.7”). • In the ESO/SERC sky survey image taken in 1976, a faint object of magnitude 21 was found in the same location in the J plate. • The R plate of the same survey taken in 1984 shows no object at all, implying that V4334 SGR was at most about 20.5 in R magnitude. • Therefore, Sakurai believed that V4334 SGR was a nova. • Spectrum taken soon after the discovery showed pure absorption lines of He , C , C , N , O , Si and faint lines of H. • In IAU Circular 6325 (26 Feb 1996), Benetti and others pointed out that the slow brightness evolution and the C-rich and H-poor spectrum suggest that this object may be undergoing its final helium flash stage. • In IAU Circular 6328 (29 Feb 1996), Durebeck and Pollacco found an almost circular planetary nebula around the central star V4334 SGR. • At this point, it is clear that Sakurai has discovered an object undergoing a final helium flash. • And for the first time, this object is referred to as the Sakurai’s Object (櫻井天體). • Recall that a main sequence star with about the mass of our Sun burns hydrogen steadily in the core. • The core becomes helium-rich. • Standard stellar evolution theory tells us that the star will then evolve to a red giant. • In the red giant phase, the core is made up of mainly non-burning helium which is surrounded by a hydrogen burning shell. • The outer layer of this red giant star is convective. The convective layer extends very close to the hydrogen burning shell. • In this “first dredge-up”, some He produced in the hydrogen burning shell will be transported to the stellar surface. • At a later time, the contracting helium core ignites in the form of helium core flash and we have a star that burns helium in the core and hydrogen in a outer burning shell. • But sooner or later, the core helium will be used up, leaving a carbon-oxygen-rich core. • This marks the formation of an asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star. • It consists of a non-burning carbon-oxygen core, a helium burning shell and a hydrogen burning shell. • Shortly before the formation of an AGB, convective instability in some higher mass pre-AGBs may lead to the “second dredgeup”, resulting in an increase of He, C and N on the stellar surface. • The hydrogen and helium shells burn at very different rates. Very quickly, the AGB star will set into the so-called thermally pulsing AGB phase (TP-AGB phase). • The amplitude of the pulsation gradually increases. • It is the unstable and oscillating TP-AGB phase that leads to a massive material ejection from the star. • A TP-AGB will undergo the so-called “third dredge-up”. According to the simulations by Iben together with Sugimoto and Nomoto, the process goes as follows: 1) The “off” phase: The re-ignition of the slow and steady H shell burning. This shell dominates the energy production. 2) The “on” phase: He shell burns very strongly. Shell luminosity goes as high as 108 Lsun. An inter-shell convective zone is formed. 3) The “power down” phase: He burning declines. The inter-shell convective zone disappears. The inter-shell region expands. The H burning shell is extinguished (or very nearly so). 4) The “dredge-up” phase: In response to the increasing luminosity coming out from the He burning shell, convective envelope extends down to the extinguished H burning shell. This brings a lot of C into the stellar surface. • The rapid mass loss due to pulsating instability or strong stellar wind blow this carbon-rich outer-layer into space, producing a planetary nebula. • Now back to the Sakurai’s object. Within the first 5 months after its discovery, its surface H abundance decreased rapidly. Also, its surface temperature decreased by several hundred K per month. • The spectrum quickly reddened. Its optical emission eventually blocked by the dust and gas ejected from the outer layer although it remains bright in IR. • To summarize, Sakurai’s object was a dim hot but rapidly cooling object about 20 years before its discovery in 1996. (It was a new born white dwarf at that time.) • It was red and increasingly carbon-rich. It also ejected a lot of dust since its discovery. (It was undergoing the helium shell flash and the third dredge-up around that time.) • The only reasonable explanation is that Sakurai’s object is undergoing its final helium shell flash before it dies and joins the rank of white dwarfs. • This star is currently evolving at a timescale of a few 10s to at most 100 years --- a very rare situation in stellar evolution indeed. • Besides Sakurai’s object, V605 Aql (outburst around 1919-1921) and FG Sge (outburst around 1900-1965) were possible born-again AGB stars. • Although Sakurai’s object is not visible in the visible spectrum now, AAVSO advises amateurs to monitor this object occasionally.