Astronomy

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The first observed gravitational
waves from the merger of two neu-
tron stars was also the first event
observed in both gravitational waves
and electromagnetic radiation,
including gamma rays, X-rays, vis-
ible light, and radio waves. Based on
the corresponding electromagnetic
radiation received, astronomers are
now piecing together the merger’s
aftermath, finding that the resulting
remnant, likely a black hole, is sur-
rounded by a “cocoon” of material
trapping any jets it may be emitting.
This most recent model was pub-
lished December 20 in Nature, based
on observations of radio waves and
X-rays from the event. Radio waves

from the merger were first picked up
September 2, 2017, and grew stronger
over time. But in the simple model —
with a remnant both surrounded by a
shell of material from the explosion
and emitting narrow jets with
enough energy to punch through
that shell — radio emission should
grow weaker. Instead, if the shell
completely blocks and absorbs the
jets, they sweep up an enshrouding
cocoon of material that re-emits the
lost energy at other wavelengths. In
this case, both radio and X-ray emis-
sion should grow stronger.
When the Chandra X-ray
Observatory followed up in early
December, the remnant’s X-ray

emission had indeed brightened, just
as the cocoon model predicted. “The
gradual brightening of the radio signal
indicates we are seeing a wide-angle
outflow of material, traveling at speeds
comparable to the speed of light, from
the neutron star merger,” said Kunal
Mooley of the National Radio
Astronomy Observatory, the first
author on the paper, in a press release.
“It was very exciting to see our
prediction confirmed,” added co-
author Gregg Hallinan of Caltech. “An
important implication of the cocoon
model is that we should be able to
see many more of these collisions by
detecting their electromagnetic, not
just their gravitational, waves.” — A.K.

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Neutron star merger created a cocoon


HOME, SWEET HOME. Astronauts sampled 15 locations on the International Space Station as part of a microbial
survey. Analysis showed the microbial community aboard the ISS closely resembles those found in Earth-based homes.

How to weigh solitary stars
A star’s mass determines nearly everything about it,
from its life span and temperature to the way it will die.
Measuring mass is easiest in multiple-star systems, where
Newton’s laws of motion allow astronomers to infer mass
by mapping the stars’ orbits around each other. Solitary
stars, however, are much harder to weigh.
But a new method, designed for use with the
European Space Agency’s Gaia mission and NASA’s
upcoming Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS),
promises to revolutionize this type of measurement.
Developed by Vanderbilt University professor
Keivan Stassun and his colleagues, the method combines
the star’s total light and its parallax (a star’s apparent
motion in the sky relative to background stars as Earth
circles the Sun) to estimate its diameter. Then, based on
the way the starlight flickers over time, astronomers can
measure the star’s surface gravity. From its diameter and
surface gravity, they can derive the star’s mass. Stassun’s
group published their method December 15 in The
Astronomical Journal.
“We have shown that we can estimate the mass of
stars cataloged by NASA’s Kepler mission with an

accuracy of about 25 percent, and we estimate that it will
provide an accuracy of about 10 percent for the types of
stars that the TESS mission will be targeting,” said Stassun
in a press release.
Other methods of estimating the mass of lone stars
carry uncertainties of up to 100 percent. If a star has plan-
ets, astronomers can then misjudge their masses by up to
67 percent. A more accurate method for weighing single
stars promises the ability to gain vastly more insight into
these stars and their planets. — A.K.

NEW MODEL. The simple model (left) of a neutron star merger remnant spewing out narrow jets into a shell of debris was ruled out by
observations of increasing radio and X-ray radiation after August’s gravitational wave event. Instead, a new model (right) accounts for the
observations with a cocoon of material stopping and absorbing the energy from the jets, then re-emitting it over a wide angle. D. BERRY

WEIGHING IN. Accurately measuring the mass of solitary stars
will not only improve our understanding of these objects, but also
vastly improve estimates of the mass of any planets found circling
them. NASA/TIM PYLE
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