Identifying Stars in the
Center of NGC 6397
Four types of stars reside within the center of
the globular cluster NGC 6397. They have been identified
in the accompanying image as the following:
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1) Helium white dwarfs (blue
squares): Three faint blue stars that
do not vary in brightness can be seen near
the center of the cluster. These stars may
be very-low-mass white dwarfs, formed in the
cores of giant stars whose evolution is somehow
interrupted by a stellar collision or an interaction
with a binary companion. When a giant star
interacts with another star, it can lose its
outer layers prematurely, exposing its hot,
blue core.
2) Blue stragglers (blue
circles): A blue straggler is a hot,
bright, young star that is the result of a
direct collision between two stars that have
merged together to form a new star. They stand
out among the old stars that make up the vast
majority of stars in a globular cluster.
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Illustration
Credit:
NASA, A. Cool (SFSU) and Z. Levay (STScI)
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3) Normal white dwarfs (purple
circle): These stars appear throughout the
cluster and form through the normal stellar evolution
processes, when outer layers have been burned off
of the star. Since they don't involve any stellar
interactions, which occur predominantly near the
cluster center, there are very few visible in this
close-up image of NGC 6397. Nearly 100 such burned-out
stars were identified in the entire image.
4) Cataclysmic variables (red
triangles): A cataclysmic variable is a pairing
of a normal, hydrogen-burning star and a burned-out
star, or white dwarf. In this binary system, material
pulled off the surface of the normal star by the
white dwarf will encircle the white dwarf in an
"accretion disk," and eventually falls
onto it. The result of this accretion process is
that cataclysmic variables vary in brightness.
Chandra Images of the
Center of NGC 6397
The Chandra X-Ray satellite has a much different
view of the center of the globular cluster NGC 6397.
In this Chandra true-color X-Ray image the bright
white sources (and the blue source on the right
most edge) are cataclysmic variables, while the
bright yellow source to lower center is a thermally
emitting neutron star, in a quiescent low-mass x-ray
binary. Chandra X-Ray image courtesy of J. Grindlay.
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Place
mouse on image for
HST field of view
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Step by Step Comparison of HST and Chandra Images
Click on Images for Larger View
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