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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Scientists Solve Mystery of How Most Antimatter in the Milky Way Forms
by Staff Writers
Canberra, Australia (SPX) May 22, 2017


File image showing a simulated view of the Milky Way.

A team of international astrophysicists led by The Australian National University (ANU) has shown how most of the antimatter in the Milky Way forms.

Antimatter is material composed of the antiparticle partners of ordinary matter - when antimatter meets with matter, they quickly annihilate each other to form a burst of energy in the form of gamma-rays.

Scientists have known since the early 1970s that the inner parts of the Milky Way galaxy are a strong source of gamma-rays, indicating the existence of antimatter, but there had been no settled view on where the antimatter came from.

ANU researcher Dr. Roland Crocker said the team had shown that the cause was a series of weak supernova explosions over millions of years, each created by the convergence of two white dwarfs which are ultra-compact remnants of stars no larger than two Suns.

"Our research provides new insight into a part of the Milky Way where we find some of the oldest stars in our galaxy," said Dr. Crocker from the ANU Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics.

Dr. Crocker said the team had ruled out the supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way and the still-mysterious dark matter as being the sources of the antimatter.

He said the antimatter came from a system where two white dwarfs form a binary system and collide with each other. The smaller of the binary stars loses mass to the larger star and ends its life as a helium white dwarf, while the larger star ends as a carbon-oxygen white dwarf.

"The binary system is granted one final moment of extreme drama: as the white dwarfs orbit each other, the system loses energy to gravitational waves causing them to spiral closer and closer to each other," Dr. Crocker said.

He said once they became too close the carbon-oxygen white dwarf ripped apart the companion star whose helium quickly formed a dense shell covering the bigger star, quickly leading to a thermonuclear supernova that was the source of the antimatter.

Research Report: "Diffuse Galactic Antimatter from Faint Thermonuclear Supernovae in Old Stellar Populations," Roland M. Crocker et al., 2017 May 22, Nature Astronomy

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Mapping the Magnetic Bridge Between Our Nearest Galactic Neighbors
Toronto, Canada (SPX) May 15, 2017
For the first time, astronomers have detected a magnetic field associated with the Magellanic Bridge, the filament of gas stretching 75,000 light-years between the Milky Way Galaxy's nearest galactic neighbours: the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC, respectively). Visible in the southern night sky, the LMC and SMC are dwarf galaxies that orbit our home galaxy and lie at a dis ... read more

Related Links
Australian National University
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It


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