NASA'S Hubble Finds Rare 'Blue Straggler' Stars In Milky Way's Hub

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May 24, 2011

Trent J. Perrotto 
Headquarters, Washington                                     
202-358-0321 
trent.j.perrotto@xxxxxxxx 

Ray Villard/Kailash Sahu 
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore 
410-338-4514/410-338-4930 
villard@xxxxxxxxx/ksahu@xxxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 11-162

NASA'S HUBBLE FINDS RARE 'BLUE STRAGGLER' STARS IN MILKY WAY'S HUB

WASHINGTON -- NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has found a rare class of 
oddball stars called blue stragglers in the hub of our Milky Way, the 
first detected within our galaxy's bulge. 

Blue stragglers are so named because they seemingly lag behind in the 
aging process, appearing younger than the population from which they 
formed. While they have been detected in many distant star clusters, 
and among nearby stars, they never have been seen inside the core of 
our galaxy. 

It is not clear how blue stragglers form. A common theory is that they 
emerge from binary pairs. As the more massive star evolves and 
expands, the smaller star gains material from its companion. This 
stirs up hydrogen fuel and causes the growing star to undergo nuclear 
fusion at a faster rate. It burns hotter and bluer, like a massive 
young star. 

The findings support the idea that the Milky Way's central bulge 
stopped making stars billions of years ago. It now is home to aging 
sun-like stars and cooler red dwarfs. Giant blue stars that once 
lived there have long since exploded as supernovae. The results have 
been accepted for publication in an upcoming issue of The 
Astrophysical Journal. Lead author Will Clarkson of Indiana 
University in Bloomington, will discuss them today at the American 
Astronomical Society meeting in Boston. 

"Although the Milky Way bulge is by far the closest galaxy bulge, 
several key aspects of its formation and subsequent evolution remain 
poorly understood," Clarkson said. "Many details of its 
star-formation history remain controversial. The extent of the blue 
straggler population detected provides two new constraints for models 
of the star-formation history of the bulge." 

The discovery followed a seven-day survey in 2006 called the 
Sagittarius Window Eclipsing Extrasolar Planet Search (SWEEPS). 
Hubble peered at 180,000 stars in the crowded central bulge of our 
galaxy, 26,000 light-years away. The survey was intended to find hot 
Jupiter-class planets that orbit very close to their stars. In doing 
so, the SWEEPS team also uncovered 42 oddball blue stars with 
brightness and temperatures typical for stars much younger than 
ordinary bulge stars. 

The observations clearly indicate that if there is a young star 
population in the bulge, it is very small. It was not detected in the 
SWEEPS program. Blue stragglers long have been suspected to be living 
in the bulge, but had not been observed because younger stars in the 
disk of our galaxy lie along the line-of-sight to the core, confusing 
and contaminating the view. 

Astronomers used Hubble to distinguish the motion of the core 
population from foreground stars in the Milky Way. Bulge stars orbit 
the galactic center at a different speed than foreground stars. 
Plotting their motion required returning to the SWEEPS target region 
with Hubble two years after the first observations were made. The 
blue stragglers were identified as moving along with the other stars 
in the bulge. 
"The size of the field of view on the sky is roughly that of the 
thickness of a human fingernail held at arm's length, and within this 
region, Hubble sees about a quarter million stars toward the bulge," 
Clarkson said. "Only the superb image quality and stability of Hubble 
allowed us to make this measurement in such a crowded field." 

>From the 42 candidate blue stragglers, the investigators estimate 18 
to 37 are likely genuine. The remainder could be a mix of foreground 
objects and, at most, a small population of genuinely young bulge 
stars. 

"The SWEEPS program was designed to detect transiting planets through 
small light variations" said Kailash Sahu, the principal investigator 
of the SWEEPS program. "Therefore the program could easily detect the 
variability of binary pairs, which was crucial in confirming these 
are indeed blue stragglers." 

Hubble is a project of international cooperation between NASA and the 
European Space Agency. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in 
Greenbelt, Md., manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science 
Institute (STScI) conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is 
operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in 
Astronomy in Washington. For images and more information about the 
findings, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/hubble 



and 



http://hubblesite.org/news/2011/16 

	
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