Tuesday, 21 January 2020

Global Gaia campaign reveals secrets of stellar pair













ESA - Gaia Mission patch.

Jan. 21, 2020

A 500-day global observation campaign spearheaded more than three years ago by ESA’s galaxy-mapping powerhouse Gaia has provided unprecedented insights into the binary system of stars that caused an unusual brightening of an even more distant star.

Stellar pair discovered in Gaia16aye microlensing event

The brightening of the star, located in the Cygnus constellation, was first spotted in August 2016 by the Gaia Photometric Science Alerts programme.

This system, maintained by the Institute of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge, UK, scans daily the huge amount of data coming from Gaia and alerts astronomers to the appearance of new sources or unusual brightness variations in known ones, so that they can quickly point other ground and space-based telescopes to study them in detail. The phenomena may include supernova explosions and other stellar outbursts.

In this particular instance, follow-up observations performed with more than 50 telescopes worldwide revealed that the source – since then named Gaia16aye – was behaving in a rather strange way.

“We saw the star getting brighter and brighter and then, within one day, its brightness suddenly dropped,” says Łukasz Wyrzykowski from the Astronomical Observatory at the University of Warsaw, Poland, who is one of the scientists behind the Gaia Photometric Science Alert programme.

“This was a very unusual behaviour. Hardly any type of supernova or other star does this.”